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} 
POEMS. 



— MtM* 

.1; £&■'" 



BY 

MISS D. P. CAMPBELL, 



OF 



ZETLAND. 



A lone wand'rer of the Northern isles, 



Plac'd far amid the melancholy main. 

THOMSON. 



LONDON: 

PRINTED FOR THE AUTHORESS; 
AND PUBLISHED BY 

BALDWIN, CRADOCK, AND JOY, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 



1816. 



Dean and Mnnday, Printers, 35, 
Threadneedle-street, London. 






TO 



WALTER SCOTT, ESQ. 



THE FOLLOWING 



Utoim* 



ARE, 



WITH HIS KIND PERMISSION, 



MOST HUMBLY 



AND RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED, 



DOROTHEA PRIMROSE CAMPBELL. 



INTRODUCTION. 



*»*H<4 



IT is more from the frequency of the practice, than from any 
wish to obtrude herself upon the notice of the Public, that the 
Authoress of the following pages considers it necessary to 
attempt saying a few words by way of preface. . To such, 
therefore, as may enquire the motives which have prompted 
her to appear in her present character, she begs leave to make 
this apology^— that, deprived in early youth of a most beloved 
and affectionate parent, whose last days were clouded by un- 
deserved and unforeseen misfortunes, she has been actuated 
by no other view than the hope of alleviating the many 
deep distresses which his untimely and lamented death has 
entailed upon his afflicted family. To say more would be 
painful — she will only add, that not enjoying the advantages 
attached to happier situations in life, and having written the 
greater part of these poems under circumstances of severe 
domestic calamity, she would fain flatter herself with the 
consoling belief, that, having no ambition to gratify, and no 
presumption to answer for, the eye of criticism will be lenient 
in its judgment, and sparing in its scrutiny. 

November, 1816. 



LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. 



Agues 

Mr. Richard Arnold, Merton 

Place, Walworth 
Mrs. Adic, Walls 
Dr. Adie, ditto 

B 

His Grace the Duke of Buc- 

cleugh, 2 copies 
Sir Thomas Charles Bunbury, 

Bart. Pall Mall 
Mr. J. M. B. Buckingham 
Mr. Wm. Bromley 
Rev. Mr. Budsworth, High 

Laven, Essex. 
Mr. Bennett, Tewkesbury 
Mrs. Beaurain 

Mrs. Baker, Buckland House 
Miss Bolt, Lerwick, 2 copies 
Dr. Barland, R. N. 4 copies 



Rev. T. Case, A. B. Jesus' Col- 
lege, Cambridge, 2 copies 

Mr. J.Oeasy, Drawing Mas- 
ter, Greenwich 



Mr. Chater, Cornhill 
Rev. S. H. Cassan, A. B. Mag- 
dalen College, Oxford 
Mr. J. Clarke, Academy, En- 
field 
Mr. P. Campbell, 23, Jewry 

Street, Aldgate 
Mr. J.Chappell,jun. Walworth 
Mr. E. Cook, Symond's Inn 
Mr. William Henry Catman 
Mr. L. XL Cove, White Friars, 

2 copies 
Mr. Richard Fredk. Coultart, 
Lower Thornhaugh-street 
Miss Coultart, ditto 
Major DugaldCampbell, Roy- 
al Artillery, Woolwich 
Mrs. Campbell, CadoganPlace 
Mr. A. Cheyne, Hillswick 
Mr. Cluness, North Isles 
Charlotte, Lerwick 
Capt. Cathcart, R. N. 2 copies 
Mr. Campbell, Royal Marines 
Capt. Campbell, R. N. 2 co- 
pies 
Miss Cragie, Leith 
Capt. Cator, R. N. 2 copies 



si rscrirers. 



Mr. Chapman, Basinghall-st. 

Captain Archibald Campbell, 
Hon. 11. I. c.'s Service, a, 
Suffolk-street, Ha) market 

Mr. Donald Carrie, 6, I re- 
market 

D 
"Mr. S. Dobcll, Cranbrook 
Miss R. E. Delannoys, Lang- 
don 

\1\A\ m. Dallas, (J. Cummin- 
Street, Pentonville 
Mr. Davenport, Rawstone- 

strect, Islington Road 
Miss M. Dudley, CamberweJJ 
Air. Charles S. Dudley, ditto 
Air. George Dudley, Islington 
Miss Davey, Clapham Com- 
mon. 2 copies 
Mr. J. Davis. Shrewsbury 
Mrs. \. Dnncan, Lero ick 

E 
Mrs. Baric, Kentish Town 
\rthur Edmondstonc, AI. D. 
Lerwick 



M,. II. I inn 

Mlr.Cbarlefl Fiest,GoldsmiuYi 

Row, Hacknej Fields 
Lh atenanl Prazer, ?>3 Regt. 



Mr. [.Gall, 44, \* ' ymoutb-st. 



Air. Gribble, Old Jewry 

Mr. Thomas Godfrey, 2o. 

1 [oughton-etreet, Strand 
Mrs. R. G. 

NIlSS (Joodeliild,Toolcy-stree1 
Mr. George Gregory, Middle 
Temple Lam; 

Mr. Alex. Gordon, Strand 
Mrs. Gifford, Busta, 4 copies 
Mr. A. Gi ierson, Lem iek 
Air. Gilbert Gandon, ditto 
Mr. Thomas Gifford 
Mrs. Grant, late of Dathell, 

2 copies 

Major Grant, late of 97m Re- 
giment, 2 copies 

M< ssrs. Guthrie and Tait, 
Edinburgh 

H 
Mr. Richard Hatt, tathoroJ 
the Hermit, L) I ics, Bee. 
Aliss Hopkmson, Doncastei 

Rev. John Harris, '>7, llatton 

Garden 

Mr. E. Hardy 

Mis. Hilton. Gray's Inn Co£ 
Ice House 

Mm. llaskoll. Newport, [slfl 
<A\\ ighl 

Lad} Hamley, Bodmin,< lorn- 
wall, 2 

Mis. II, ml I GlOOp, 

Bdinbr 
Mrs. Hay, L< m ick 



SUBSCRIBERS. 



Mr. G. J. LloycTsCoffeeHouse 

Mr. Thomas Irvine, Mid- 
brake, Zetland 

Mr. Alexander Ledwick Ir- 
vine, Asylum for Deaf 
and Dumb, Kent Road 

Mrs. Jamieson, Lerwick 



Miss Kitmer, Swaff'ham, Nor- 
folk 
Mr. Robert B. Kay 
Mr. J. Key, Ab church Lane 



Mr. J. M. Lacey 
Mr. C. W. Lovill 
Mr. G. Linklater, Lerwick 
Mr. Leisk, Lunna 
Mr. Thomas Leisk, jun. 
Mr. James Lockyer, Totten- 
ham Court Road 

M 

Mr. W. Mill, 70, LondonWall 

Mr. T. C. M. Stock Exchange 

Mr. R. M. Deptford 

Miss Murray 

Mr. Millard, 2, Alfred Place 

Mr. Duncan M c Nab, 3 copies 

Miss Macdor "^ Albemarlc- 

stree' . 
dam is 

A^JU^ Macquarie, 

j.>cvv Soutu Wales 



Capt. Donald Macpherson, 

2d Garrison Battalion 
Colonel M'Dowall, 14, Suf- 
folk-street, Haymarket 
Mrs. Monat, Gardy 
Mrs. Monat, Belmont 
Capt. Macdonnell, Gordon 

Hall, Aberdeen 
Mrs. Muir,Caldwell, Ayrshire 
Miss Eliza Mitchell, Camden 

Town 
Capt. M c Dermond, 6th Re- 
giment, V. B. Fort George 

N 

Capt. Gideon Nicolson, Royal 
Marines, Chatham 

Mr. A. Nicolson, Lochend, 
4 copies 

Lieut. Gen. Robert Nichol- 
son, York Place, Port- 
man Square, 2 copies 

Mrs. Nicholson, ditto 

Miss Ann Newman, Peckham 

Mr. Thomas Newman, ditto 

O 
Mr. C. Ogilvy, Lerwick 
Mr. S. Orchard, Coal Ex- 
change, 2 copies 
***** 3 copies 



Mr. John Parry, Berner's-st. 

2 copies 



IV. 



SI RSCRIBERS. 



Mr. \\ in. Palling, kennimrfon 

Mr. Page, Gray's bm Ceffee- 
1 louse 

Mr. A. Purw .70.1. ondonW all 
Mi. AY. P. St. Swilhin'sLanc 

Mr. John Pontifex, John-flt. 
Bedford Rem 

Miss Eliz. fryer, BaMoek 

Air. Pollock, North Shields 

Air. Phillips, R. N. 

Mrs. Pigue 

Miss Peake, Pitt-street, Old 
Thanet Road, Southw ark 

R 
M iss Renou,33,Queen-street. 

Bristol 
Mr. John RajwUngson, Ne* 

Plate, Alresford 
Mrs. Robertson, Gfossaburgh 

2 copies 
Mr. G. Ross, Lerwick 
Miss Rosenberg, Lambeth 

S 
\\ \i.ri k Scott, esq. Castle- 
strccl, Ldinbur^h, 4 copies 
Mr. J. Scott, Jan. Scalloway 
Rev. T. Y>. Stoney, A. 15. 
Jesus 1 College, Cambridge 
("apt. D. Smith, Dock-] louse, 

( Irand Surrej Canal 
Mi. .1. Storcr, rfoxton Square 
Mr. T. (;. s. Custom-House 
Mr. Gilbeii Sandison, 



Miss Stone, Hastings 

Mr*. Manlc\. Th;i\ci-Ml. ct. 

Manchester Square 

Mr. A\ ni. Spence, Lerwick 
Mr. S. Stiii -«■. Nrwiiiuton- 
Units 

Mr. Stephens, R. V 

Mi. Smith. Quality Court, 

Chancer] Lane 

T 

Miss Eliza Tooth, Cranbrook 
Hfiss Ann Taylor, ditto 
Miss Eliza Taylor, ditto 
Mr. 1. Turton, Lhrerpool 
Miss Tisdall, *2 copi< i 
Mr. Telfris, Edinburgh 
Capt. Tait, R. V 
Mis. Towers, 8, WarnerVst. 

ClerkenweM 
Mr. s. Thompson, Walworth 
Mr.R. I'm ■rm:m.Ratclifl"C russ 

AY 

Mr. Win. Watson, Mabledon 

Place. Russell Smian 
Mr. Hugh \\ ilson.ti}. Aldcr- 

manbiii \ 
Mr. AN ainw right, '-2 copies 
M i . George \\ ood, Stock 

Exchange 
M. I. \s iMiams, Hill-street, 

I insburj 
Mi. B. Wilkinson, < v »i; 

(miii 1, ( "haiici i \ I iS&e 



purine 



THE SPIRITS OF THE HILL * 



It was on Burray's seabeat Isle, 

Where Fairies dwelt in days of yore, 
That Richard's lowly cottage stood, 
Near where old Neptune's briny flood 
Loud dash'd the sounding shore. 

Though Richard's hair was blanch'd by time, 

And Richard's furrow'd cheek was pale, 
Yet pity's gentle pow'r he felt, 
And still his kind old heart could melt 
At sorrow's tender tale, 



* The Inhabitants of Zetland suppose their hills to be haunted 
by certain fantastical beings, whom they denominate Bokies, and 
Fairy-folk, or Fairies : the former of whom are imagined to be 
spirits of Evil, and the latter spirits of Good. 

B 



To him in early youth were giv'n, 
To soothe the many cares of life, 

Two sons, dear objects of his love; 

A daughter, gentle as the dove; 
A fond industrious wife. 

But, ah! tempestuous was the night 
When on the distant stormy wave, 
His sons, within their little bark, 
Were driv'n amid the tempest dark, 
And found a watry grave. 

" Thy will, O Heav'nly Pow'r ! be done 

The suffering father cried. 
But, ah! beneath the killing stroke, 
His faithful Jenny's heart was broke, — 

She sickeu'd, droop'd, and died. 

Oh! who shall paint the husband's woe, 

Or who the father's anguish tell! 
Now one dear pledge alone remain'd, 
And still on earth his heart detain'd — 
His ever lovely Belle. 

She, milder than the breath of eve, 

When the blue billows gently play; 
And fairer than the Nereids bright 
That dance upon the sands at night 
To Cynthia's silver raj : 



To soothe his heart, to cheer his woes, 

With tender love and filial care, 
Her pious efforts yet were giv'n : 
For him she lives, for him to Heaven 
She breathes the fervent pray'r. 

And neat his little cabin seem'd, 

Deck'd by the lovely maiden's hand ; 
And still as age came stealing on, 
His fading eye with pleasure shone, 
Nor felt its with'ring hand. 

One early morn the verdant grass 

Glitt'ring with many a dew-drop lay; 
The sun fust rising from the wave, 
To nature all his radiance gave, 
And chac'd dun night away: 

When from the deep and sound repose 

That Labour's wearied sons enjoy, 
The aged Richard rais'd his head^ 
And rising from his peaceful bed, 
Breath'd the pure air with joy. 

" Where is my IsabelleT' he cried ; 

"Oh! dearest daughter, hither haste! 
Oh ! come, my child, for now to Heav'n 
Our orisons should first be giv'n; 

The wonted hour is past. 



4 

" Oh ! come, my child, thy guiltless hands 
With me in warm devotion raise; 

With me for mercies past rejoice ; 

And let again thy softer voice 
Resound thy Maker's praise*" 

Slow, slow, the anxious morning past, 

Nor yet the gentle maid was seen ; 
Trembling he search'd each fav'rite spot, 
And ask'd at ev'ry neighb'ring cot 
If there his child had been ? 



No one had seen the gentle maid ; 

And fruitless ev'ry effort prov'd 
To stop his unavailing tears, 
To still his bosom's anxious fears, 

And find the child he lov'd. 



Now sober eve, in mantle grey, 

Veil'd ev'ry scene in twilight's gloom ; 
When, all his weary wand'rings vain, 
He sought his lonely home again ; 
Mourning his hapless doom. 

How chang'd, alas ! — no daughter's care 
To smooth the restless couch of age; 
No pious child's endearing smile, 
The woe-worn father to beguile, 
And all his griefs assuage. 



5 

Now night, with her attendant stars, 

Her drowsy empire 'gan to keep ; 
Waving her wand o'er Burray's Isle, 
She woo'd the sons of want and toil 
To sweet repose and sleep. 

And all i were sunk in balmy rest, 

When by his peat-fire's dying gleam 
The sighing Richard mourning sat, 
Revolving o'er his fearful fate, 
Renouncing hope's wild dream ! 

By fits the trembling light was cast 

Around on objects faintly seen, 
When soft unlatch'd the cottage door, 
And lighter footsteps press'd the floor, 
Than earthly steps, I ween. 

Advancing, thus the Spirit said: — 

" Old man ! let grief no more annoy; 
Pale victim of despair, arise, 
And dry the tears that dim thine eyes; 
Arise to life and joy! 

Thy daughter, by eur Bokian king, 
Is to his splendid court convey 'd ; 
That stands, unseen by mortal eyes, 
Where yon dark cliffs majestic rise: 
Our monarch loves the maid. 

B3 



6 

But vain is ev'ry magic spell, 

To win th' obdurate fair-one's heart ; 
But come, and urge her to relent; — 
Cheer' d by thy presence and consent, 
She'll act a kinder part. 

Oh! come, and all thy life shall be 
With us a summer's day of Joy; 
A thousand Spirits of-our hill 
Shall wait obedient on tby will, 
And all their arts employ. 

Our greatest chieftain thou shalt be ; 

Our empress shall thy daughter reign 
Tby willing soul to me consign, 
The King of Heav'n at once resign, 

Nor dread his threaten'd pain.''* 

f; No— fiend of darkness ! hence away; 

My soul abhors thy king and thee: 
Though robb'd of her. my age's hope, 
With thee my spirit yet shall cope, 

And wait Heav'n's just decree. 

Celestial angels shall descend 

From yon high vault, on orient wing, 
And waft my child to realms of joy, 
Where thy curst arts shall ne'er annoy: 

Where blooms perpetual spring !" 



** Curse on thy dreams of heav'n and bliss, 

Old dotard, with the locks of grey!" — 
Then, while the rising tempests blow, 
The spirit, rautt'ring vengeance low, 
Flew on the winds away. 

When night again her ebon wand 

Wav'd over nature's wide domain, 
While deep her murky shadow low'rs, 
The Bokian monarch call'd his pow'rs, 
And thus address'd the train: — 



" Shall we, oh chieftains ! far renown'd, 
And known on many a distant hill, 

Be thus out-brav'd by vulgar swain? 

How my breast swelling with disdain, 
Dark thoughts of vengeance fill ! 

Go, quick your elfin shafts prepare, 
His cow, his sheep, his dogs to slay; 

Destroy each comfort of his age ; 

And this, the mandate of my rage, 
Be done ere dawns the day. 

The maid, in stony fetters bound, 

By magic arts shall here remain, — 
My love t deadly hate doth turn: 
Here long conrin'd, she'll deeply mourn 
Her obstinate disdain." 



8 

He spoke, and lowly to the ground 

His abject slaves submissive bend: — 
u Great monarch, thou shalt be obey'd V — 
When quick, each fluttering wing display'd^ 
The airy sprites ascend. 

To where fair Isabelle forlorn, 

Her pale cheeks bath'd in sorrow's dew, 
Sat in a cave, where jewels bright, 
And glow-worms shed their mingled light, 
The Bokian monarch flew. 



*' Oh, peerless beauty! why thus drench 

In such a silv'ry show'r of care, 
Thy starry eyes, so heav'nly bright 1 — 
No twinklers in the vault of night 
May boast a beam so fair ! 

Match'd with thy cheeks' celestial bloom, 
The brilliant conch's gay tints must fail ; 

Thy golden locks delight the view, 

Thy lips are of the coral's hue, 
Thy breath like Arab's gale. 

Oh ! dry these tears, and sweetly smile, 

Nor grieve me thus with proud disdain j- 
Oh, lovely mortal ! share my throne, 
My heart, my realms, are all thine own ; 
Their empress thou shalt reign !" 



•*' Thy queen! base tyrant! know this heart 
Will sooner ev'ry torture bear ! 

Hence! for thy flatt'ry ne'er can move ; 

Nor with thy base, detested love, 
Again pollute mine ear !" 

*' Ha ! — tremble then to dare my rage, 

And turn my love to deadly hate ; 
In burning torturing chains confin'd, 
Here thou remain'st! — but, yet be kind, 
Nor rashly tempt thy fate. v 

** Proud tyrant! all thy magic charms, 

And hellish witchery conabin'd, 
Shall never bring th' immortal soul 
Beneath thy curs' d and dark controul, 
Nor chain the unfetter'd mind." 



Madden'd with rage, the tyrant king 
Summon'd his hideous cruel train ; 
And to a cavern's dismal shade 
They fiercely drag the trembling maid, 
And leave her to complain. 

While there she pines, in darkness pent, 

And weeps her melancholy doom, 
To Richard's dreary cot of care, 
The Bokians swiftly cleave the air, 
Veil'd in night's murky gloom. 
B 5 



10 

And fatal night that night had been, 

To all poor Richard's hard-earn'd store ; 
But virtue's ready guardians still, 
The green-rob'd fairies of the hill, 
Watch'd at his lowly door. 

'Twas their's, wherever sorrow wept, 
To come unseen and wipe the tear ; 
Or by the mountain's dang'rous side 
The midnight traveler's steps to guide, 
And sinking soul to cheer. 

Oft on the wand'ring peasant's ear, 
When passing by some haunted hill, 

Such soothing melody has stole, 

As did his rude untutor'd soul 
With heav'nly visions fill. 

Or, when by wicked demons led 

Far o'er the desert heath astray, 
Quick burst upon his startled sight 
Their little forms so heav'nly bright, 
And shew'd the safer way. 

And now, round Richard's humble home 
Their glittering ranks embattled stood ; 

And march'd with firm undaunted mien, 

As slowly on the dewy green, 
Descends th' infernal brood. 



11 

** Stop, stop !" they shout, with one accord ; 

*' Bokians ! your wicked work forbear ;. 
Swift to your cruel, bloody king, 
Again ascend on hasty wing, 

Or dread to meet us here!" 



4t What ! here again, our ancient foes!" 

Their sable chieftain, Obin, cried; 
" How dare ye still to thwart our way, 
And rob us of our lawful prey ?•— 
Your vengeance is defied V 

Sudden, with wild, determin'd air, 

Each warrior grasp' d his well-tried bow ; 
And while their deadly arrows fly, 
Mad frenzy lights each gleaming eye, 
And scowls on ev'ry brow. 

The frighted Nereids drop their shells, 

Rush to their sea-caves, shrieking loud, 
And tremble in their native streams, 
While Cynthia veils her sick'ning beams 
Behind a sable cloud. 

And wilder still the battle rag'd; — 
The burn ran red with Fairy gore, 

And many a gasping Bokian lay, 

The life-blood ebbing fast away, 
Upon that fatal shore. 



12 

But soon the shouts of vict'ry rise ; 

Vain is the vanquish'd Bokian^s grief, 
For Richard's guardian friends succeed ; 
Dismay'd the routed squadrons bleed, 

And captive is their chief! 

" In magic chains our pris'ners bind !" 

The Fairy-leader shouted bold ; 
" Some warriors now on swiftest wing, 
Fly instant to the Bokian king, 
And thus our will be told : 



Tell him, not one of all his train, 

Not Obin's self, that fiend ador'd, 
He e'er again must hope to see, 
Till the fair lsabelle is free, 
And to her sire restor'd." 



goon to the Bokian court they flew, 
On flutt'ring pinions light convey'd: 

The proud king curs' d the hard decree, 

Yet glad to set his vassals free, 
Releas'd the captive maid. 

Oh! how her gentle bosom throbb'd, 

As pois'd in air she quickly flew, 
And reach'd once more her native cot; — 
But, ah ! upon the bloody spot, 
What horrors met her view ! 



13 

" Start not, sweet maid!" the conqueror cried, 
" In virtue's cause we bleed with joy; 

Nor fear again the Bokian pow'r 

Shall reach thee in an evil hour, 
And all our work destroy. 

Go, seek thy sorrowing aged sire ; 

Be peace and happiness your lot ! 
Be virtuous thus and pious still, 
The green-rob'd Fairies of the hill 

Shall guard thy lowly cot. 

Aurora now with rosy hands, 

Unlocks the golden gates of morn, 

And we to hail our king must fly 

To courts unseen by mortal eye, 
On downy pinions borne," 

He ceas'd, and quickly from her sight 
They vanish' d like a passing dream; 
No more was seen the bloody stain, 
The dew-drop sparkled on the plain, 
tJnsullied flow'd the stream. 



Now blue-ey'd peace, and rose-lip'd joy, 

Again on Richard's cottage smiPd ; 
Yet oft he shook his silv'ry head, 
And told with fear and solemn dread, 
The story of his child. 



14 



With grateful heart he knelt to Heav'n, 
Nor night nor morn his praises cease ; 
And, many a happy year gone by, 
Poor Richard breath'd his latest sigh, 
And clos'd his days, in peace. 



RETRIBUTION; 



THE HALL OF ST. GAR FIN. 



€ < Ah ! me, what mournful train is yon, 
That sadly winds along the vale? 

How sadly sounds the fun'ral dirge, 
Dull floating on the ev'ning gale! 

Why do the lovely maidens weep, 
Distracted o'er yon sable bier? 

Why do the gentle shepherds sigh? 
And why the aged drop the tear ? 

And why, as on the coffin's lid 

The new-rais'd earth again doth fall, 

Thus breaks such lamentation loud 
Responsive from the lips of all V 



15 

*' Come, gentle stranger, rest with me, 
If sorrow's tale thine ear beguile , 

And on this streamlet's grassy bank 
Repose thy weary limbs awhile. 

I'll tell thee why the maidens weep 
Distracted o'er that sable bier; 

I'll tell thee why the shepherds sigh, 
And why the aged drop the tear.— 

Behold amid yon distant hills, 

Whose cloudy tops invade the skies, 

An ancient castle's gothic tow'rs 
And dusky battlements arise. 

Within that castle's mould'ring walls, 
Now rudely shook by envious time, 

The warrior-knight, Sir Edgar, dwells, 
In all the flow'r of manhood's prime. 

The pine-tree on the mountain-brow, 
That waves majestic to the breeze, 

The willow bending o'er the stream, 
Not vies with Edgar's grace and ease. 

But what avails each outward grace, 
Or what the bloom of fading charms, 

When no bright virtue fills the breast, 
Nor truth, nor faith, the bosom warms ? 

Elfrida was the loveliest maid 
That yonder valley ever knew ; 



16 

Soft blushes mantled on her cheek, 

And beam'd like heav'n her eyes of blue. 

And in her mild and gentle heart 
Each softer virtue lov'd to dwell: 

I've mark'd, when want or woe came by, 
That angel-breast with pity swell. 

Nor e'er at fair Elfrida's door, 

The trembling beggar sued in vain ; 

For still that gen'rous hand was prompt 
To soothe the wand'ring wretch's pain. 

But now a cold and breathless corse 
In yonder grave Elfrida lies." 



" Good Heav'n !" the starting stranger cried, 
With madness flashing from his eyes. 

In vain the stranger strove to hide 
The pangs that in his bosom bleed ; 

But soon he check'd the rising groan, 
And bade the wond'ring swain proceed. 

" And didst thou know the hapless fair 
That sleeps in yonder lowly bed? 

Oh ! then for her, the child of grief ! 
Do thou the tear of pity shed. 

Five years their annual course have run, 
Since first Rinaldo, noble youth, 

(Sir Edgar's brother), woo'd the maid, 
And vow'd eternal love and truth. 



17 

But, ah! Elfrida's matchless charms 
Had won the guilty Edgar's heart; 

Rous'd the wild passions of his breast, 
And bade him act the villain's part, 

For while to all he seem'd to bow 
At purest friendship's hallow'd fane, 

He did but plot the coward scheme 
Her plighted hand to falsely gain. 

But now the direful trump of war 
Invok'd each brother to the field ; 

Rinaldo left the maid he lov'd, 
For glittering helmet, spear, and shield. 

They parted, and Elfrida mourn' d 
Her absent love with streaming eyes ; 

But, ah! that lover ne'er return'd 
To hush the maiden's ceaseless sighs. 

For, oh ! that chief in battle fell ; 

But when the proud Sir Edgar came, 
With joy and triumph, base and bold, 

He soon confess'd th' unhallow'd flame." 

** And did the perjur'd false one yield!" 
With wilder looks the stranger cried ;— 

" Ah! no, but faithful still and true, 
She scorn'd his love," the swain replied. 

" And when he press'd the weeping fair, 
With haughty look she still would say— 



18 

4 Renounce thy hopes, insulting lord, 
Nor think to tempt these tears away. 

Oh ! leave rise still to mourn my loss, 
And let my widow'd heart complain; 

A heart that only can repel 

Thy hated love with just disdain/ — 

His fame, his wealth, derided thus, 
His proffer'd love with scorn returned; 

Soon chang'd that love to equal hate, 
And fierce revenge his bosom burn'd. 

Then from her aged guardian's roof 
By force he tore the trembling maid; 

With bleeding heart I saw the fair 
To yonder dreary tow'rs convey'd. 

There three long years Elfrida mourn'd, 
Bereft of freedom, joy, and peace ; 

While mirth rung through the echoing hall, 
And feasts and revels never cease. 

There oft, I ween, the midnight moon 
Has witness'd poor Elfrida's woes; 

And there last morning's radiant sun 
Upon her breathless corse arose. 

Yet when the sun that day went down, 
And ev'ning veil'd yon lofty hill, 

From Edgar's castle, on the breeze 
The sounds of mirth were laughing still ! 



19 



Oh! where has Heav'n his lightning stay'd, 
That doth not flash the tyrant's doom !"- 

M It lingers not (the stranger cried), 
The hour of retribution's come. 

Oh ! dear Elfrida, murder'd maid ! 

Oh ! linger near — thou soon shalt see, 
By this firm hand, thy murd'rer lie 

A bleeding sacrifice to thee. 

For not on battle's bloody field 

The foeman laid Rinaldo low; 
'Twas Edgar's arm that rais'd the steel, 

A brother's hand that struck the blow. 

Though Heav'n, in mercy, spar'd my life, 
Yet many a long and ling ring day, 

Within a dungeon's noisome gloom 
Rinaldo pin'd his hours away." — 

With wild amaze, and deep surprise, 
Aghast the wond'ring peasant stands; 

Then sobbing sunk upon his knees, 
And bath'd with tears Rinaldo's hand. 

" But, come," the warrior fiercely cried; 

" I follow vengeance' bloody call!"- — 
Then with quick step, and frantic mien, 

He sought St. Garvin's ancient hall. 

There 'mid his guests, Sir Edgar sat, 
With splendid dress and haughty air; 



20 

But anguish gnawing at his heart, 
Black seat of horror and despair I 

He started up with wild affright, 

His brother's faded form he view'd ; 

Down dropp'd the goblet from his hand, 
And cold damp drops his forehead dew'd I 

" Just Heav'n! what ghastly spectre yon! 

Why hast thou left thy bloody tomb? 
Or dost thou, dreadful vision ! come 

To warn me of approaching doom?" 

" If I'm a spectre of the tomb, 
What hand prepared that tomb for me ? 

What ruffian broke Elfrida's heart? 
Say, do I now that ruffian see ?" 

"Forgive! forgive!" Sir Edgar cried, 
While terror nVd his stony eye! 

Thy brother's crime, oh ! yet forgive ; 
Forgive, Rinaldo — for I die !" 

Rinaldo check'd his lifted arm, 

He sheath'd the glitt'ring sword again ; 

For tender mercy touch'd his soul, 

But touch'd too late, and pleads in vain. 

For cold and chill was Edgar's heart, 
A freezing pang congeal'd his breath ; 

And down, with many a horrid groan, 
The guilty traitor sunk in death, 



2t 

Rinaldo sought the cloister's gloom, 
Far from the busy haunts of men ; 
Where meek religion, calm repose, 
And holy quiet sooth'd his pain. 



AGNES AND THE WATER-SPRITE, 



Twas on a gloomy April day, 
On Brassa's hills the mist was grey, 

And cold and chilling was the wind ; 
When Agnes on the rocky shore 
Sat listening to the billows' roar, 

In musing pensiveness reclin'd. 

Fair Agnes was the loveliest maid 

That e'er o'er Brassa's mountains stray'd ; 

For fairy form, and angel face, 
And auburn tresses unconfin'd 
That sported wanton to the wind, 

Had deck'd her with each outward grace. 

Oft while the gentle Agnes sung, 
The rocks with vocal music rung; 

While Echo, from her mossy cave, 
Catching the wild notes, warbled high, 
Or softly as they seem'd to die, 

Repeats them to the list'ning wave. 



22 

" Oh I why," she sings, " does Donald stay, 
From me, from love, from friends away, 

A truant thus from sweet repose, 
To roam the sea's inconstant breast, 
Whose angry billows never rest, 

The sport of every storm that blows ! 

When last upon the foaming tide 
I saw the vessel proudly ride, 

That bore my sinking heart away, 
While parting on the moonlight shore, 
He vow'd to love me evermore, 

And softly whisp'ring, thus did say: — 

By the pale moon, and azure sky, 
By Heav'n's eternal majesty, 

I swear I'll never love but thee ! 
Ye sacred guardians of the good, 
That watch us on the troubled flood, 

Forsake me if I perjur'd be!' — 

There in the sacred face of Heav'n, 
My solemn vows in turn were giv'n* 

And if those vows were false, I pray'd 
That he who won my faithless heart 
Should act, like me, th' inconstant's part, 

And leave me wretched and betray'd." 

Thus Agnes sung in artless lays, 
Her Donald's love, her Donald's praise, 
Nor dream'd a list'ning ear w f as nigh ; 



23 

When, lo ! beside the billowy flood 
A brighter form than mortal stood, 
And view'd her with enraptur'd eye, 

Like golden threads, or surtny beams, 
His hair in many a ringlet streams 

Adown his shoulders fair ; 
Bright was his bloom, and his dark eye 
Like star in bleak December's sky, 

And heav'nly was his air. 

A jetty courser, dark as night, 
Beside him stood in harness bright, 

And neighing paw'd the sand ; 
With wild impatience toss'd his mane, 
While gracefully the silken rein 

Slung from his master's hand. 

While Agnes gaz'd with wond'ring eyes, 
And thought some angel from the skies 

Had deign'd on earth to tread, 
The graceful stranger silence broke, 
Soft music warbled as he spoke, 

And thus address'd the maid: — 

" Shalt thou, oh ! loveliest of thy kind ! 
Be to this wint'ry isle conhVd, 

And in some lowly cell, 
With all these bright immortal charms, 
Be doom'd to some rude native's arms, 

With want and woe to dwell] 



24 

Oh ! fly with me, my lovely maid, 
Nor be by vulgar fools betray'd; — 

Fly on the wings of love 
With me to some more blessed clime, 
Where forests rear their heads sublime, 

Where waves the spicy grove. 

Why wilt thou here the absence mourn 
Of one who never may return? 

Perhaps the wand'rer now 
From thy lov'd image falsely flies, 
And for another fair-one sighs, 

Forgetful of his vow. 

Not such the youth who bows before 
Thy matchless charms, and shall adore 

While life his bosom warms ; 
Oh ! come, and bless my happy land, 
Where all shall bow at thy command, 

And worship all thy charms. 

The sands upon my shores are gold, 
Where ocean's gentlest waves are roll'd, 

The rocks refulgent shine 
With coral, pearl, and sapphire blue, 
And precious stones of ev'ry hue, 
And diamonds from the mine. 

There orange groves extend their shade, 
To screen thy beauties, lovely maid, 
From noon-day's scorching heat: 



25 



And pleasant bow'rs of rare perfume, 
Where nature's loveliest roses bloom, 
Shall be thy cool retreat." ^ 

\i- 

He ceased, — to Agnes' inmost soul 
The voice of adulation stole, 

And won her changing heart; 
Yet conscience whisper'd Donald's name 
With all his worth, and constant flame; 

While rising to depart. 

The stranger seiz'd her yielding hand, 
And lightly springing from the strand, 

With Agnes at his side, 
With many a soothing word of love 
He strove her terrors to remove, 

As o'er the sands they ride. 

With hope and dread her bosom buru'd, 
And many a wistful look she turn'd 

Upon her native shore ; 

" Scenes of my childish days, farewell 
In happier clime shall Agnes dwell, 

And never see you more." 

The courser left the sandy shore, 
And sprung amid the ocean's roar, 

With many a hideous yell : 
Chang'd was the spirit's heav'nly form, 
His native waves and roaring storm 

Had broke the magic spell. 



'26 

MixM with the waves the courser seeni'd ; 
In trembling agony she scream'd, 

And gaz'd with wild affright, 
While the dark fiend the waves did quaffs 
And with a loud and hellish laugh, 

Evanish'd from her sight. 

Dread was the storm, and hoarse the wave 
Rebellow'd 'neath the rocky cave, 

While echo sadly moans; 
And oft amid the tempest's roar 
Was heard upon the dreary shore, 

The dying Agnes' groans. 

And oft at midnight's moony scene 
A faded form of ghastly mien 

Across the waves doth glide; 
And oft upon the passing gales 
A plaintive voice the ear assails, 

When wand'ring by the tide. 



-*^0i*«~ 



THE STORM. 



Far on the ocean's lonely bed 
Where rude Oreadean Islands iie 3 

In nature's wildest robe array'd, 
Beneath an ever clouded sky ; 



27 

Where round each coast, with hollow roar, 
The rude winds keep their viewless court ; 

Where ceaseless billows dash the shore, 
And spirits of the storm resort ; 

On wild North-Mavin's rocky beach, 
Poor Eric's lowly cottage stood, 

And brav'd alike the fearful reach 
Of howling winds and foaming flood. 

His Tamir, partner of his joys, 
Of all his grief, and all his care — 

His elder hopes, two hardy boys — 
The infants prattling round his chair— 

These sooth'd his labours, cheer'd his heart ; 

These bound him to his humble cot; 
The noblest feelings, void of art, 

Endear'd to him the lonely spot. 

Long with misfortune's gloomy train, 
And want and poverty he strove; 

Yet shrunk not back from toil nor pain, 
Bless'd with these objects of his love. 

Oft in his little fragile bark 

For them he roam'd the billowy tide, 
And many a night, forlorn and dark, 

Upon the stormy wave would ride. 

And soon his boys increas'd his store, 
For all his dangers now they shar'd ; 



28 

And often to the wand'ring poor 
Their scanty pittance have they spa'd.r 

Content and health his cottage bless'd, 
And plenty still his labour crown'd ; 

Calm pleasure fill'd his pious breast, 
And peace and comfort smil'd around. 

But short is pleasure's fleeting day, 
And like the sun-beam on the deep 

That glitters bright, then fades away, 

And leaves the trembling wretch to wee p 

The weary cares of day were o'er, 
And tranquil slept the busy world; 

The billows slumber'd on the shore, 
And scarce a breeze the waters curl'd. 

When Eric, rous'd from happy dreams, 
Light started from the arms of rest, 

And by the pale moon's glimmering beams 
Embark'd upon the ocean's breast. 

The merry lads were at his side ; 

And told him many a cheerful tale, 
As swiftly o'er th' unruffled tide 

Soft zephyrs waft their swelling sail. 

The morning rose with smiles serene ; 

They set their lines with anxious care, 
And joyful hail'd the prosp'rous scene; 

The deep so still, the heav'ns so fair. 



29 

And fair the distant landscape seem'd, 
While yet the radiant sun on high 

Far o'er the glassy ocean stream'd, 
And blaz'd amid the azure sky. 

The awful calm that breath'd around, 
As if all nature's pulse were still, — 

The silence broke not by a sound, — 
With pious awe their bosoms fill. 

But soon that awe was chang'd to dread, 
When rush'd the tempest wild and loud, 

For sudden storm began to spread, 
And lightnings darted from the cloud. 

The rolling thunder peal'd afar; 

In rushing torrents fell the rain; 
The jarring elements at war, 

With horrid tumult shook the main. 

All-gracious Heav'n ! avert their doom ; — 
They drive before th' unsparing gale ; 

Still darker frowns the gath'ring gloom, 
And ev'ry cheek is deadly pale. 

Close to his panting heart, the sire 

With anguish press' d his hopes, his pride- 
Quick flash'd across the blue-wing'd fire, 
And laid them breathless at his side ! 

" My boys ! my boys !" he madly cries, 
While louder still the tempest blows: 
c3 



30 

On the Wild winds his voice but dies ; 
They only mock the father's woes. 

The boat is whelm'd amid the wave ; 

Dark horror sits on Eric's soul — 
" My wife, my babes ! Almighty ! save"— 

He sinks, — the surges round him roll. 

Oh ! soft may hapless Eric rest 
Upon his coral grave reclin'd ; 

And mingling with the sainted blest 
His spirit mount upon the wind ! 

But who shall hush his Tamir's sighs, 
And rear his little helpless train ? 

Oh ! who shall stay their orphan-cries ? 
Or who relieve their wants and pain? 

No more the heart-broke Tamir joys 
To see them happy, blythe, and gay; 

No household care her hand employs — 
But all is ruin and dismay ! 

Oft on the shore with aching brow 
She marks the angry billows' rave.; 

And weeps for him who silent now 
Lies cold beneath the distant wave. 

May Charity, with aspect bland, 
Some mild angelic form assume, 

And shed sweet blessings from her hand, 
To mitigate the mourner's doom. 



31 



/ 

THE ZETLAND FISHERMAN 



Oh! fair arose the summer dawn, 
No sullen mist was seen to lour^ 

Night's dreary shadows were withdrawn, 
And morning brought her golden hour. 

Soft was the air, and breathing balm ; 

The sea-fowl clamour'd on the shore ; 
The sky serene, the ocean calm, 

And hush'd the breakers' deaf'ning roar. 

And slowly in the glittering east, 
His orient head the Sun uprais'd; 

His beamy splendours round him cast, 
On rock and steep refulgent blaz'd. 

A trembling stream of glory lay 
Across the ocean's rippling bed, 

And quick his bright beams sipp'd away 
The dew-drop from each grassy blade. 

The soaring lark had mock'd the eye, 
But still was heard his matin song; 

The sea-gull floats with restless cry; 
The hungry raven flits along ; 



32 

And heard was many a female voice* 

That echo'd o'er the rocky shore, 
And lisping children gay rejoice, 

And listen for the distant oar. 

At length the six-oar'd boat appears, 
Slow moving o'er th' unruffled tide ; 

Their long, long stay with artless tears, 
The little prattlers fondly chide — 

" How couldst thou stay so long at sea ? 

High blew the wind, and mammy wept ; 
We could not sleep, but thought on thee, 

Though sweetly little Mary slept." 

Anxious the wife her husband views, 
Who weary drags his limbs along; 

" Hey, bonnie Kate !" he cries, " what news V* 
Then carols blythe his morning song. 

" Oh ! wherefore, William, stay so long 

Upon the dark and stormy sea, 
Where tempests howl, and dangers throng, 

So far from thy dear babes and me ? 

For dark and dismal was the night, 
And fearful was the billows' roar; 

And many a sheeted ghost, and sprite, 
Shriek'd wildly on the sea-beat shore. 

I listen'd fearful to the wind, 
And heard a groan in ev'ry blast ; 



33 

Ten thousand fears disturb'd my mind, 
E'en when the raging storm was past." 

" But we've successful been, dear Kate ; 

Behold, my lass, that plenteous load ! — 
To day I mean to dine in state — 

On haddock, turbot, ling, and cod." 

The hardy swain, with raptur'd eyes, 
Kisses in turn his babes, and Kate, 

Then to his humble cottage hies, 
And blesses Heav'n with heart elate. 

The scanty produce of the soil 

Smokes on his platter clean and neat ; 

And though his fare be coarse, yet toil 
Hath made the well-earn'd morsel sweet. 

Then on his straw bed careless thrown, 
He sinks into the arms of sleep ; 

Leaves it to paltry wealth to groan, 
And pamper'd luxury to weep. 



IANTHE TO HER HARP. 



Come, gentle Harp, sweet soother of my woes! 

And in some sadly pleasing strain 

Teach Ianthe to complain; 
While at each melancholy close 
c 5 



34 

Dove-ey'd pity hov'ring near, 
On each cheek a pearly tear, 

Droops her snowy plumes and sighs; — 
And responsive to the sound 
From hollow rock, or cave around, 

Echo, sportive nymph, replies. 

Soft-ton' d Harp ! Ianthe's treasure, 
Slower yet thy solemn measure- 
In more lengthen'd notes of woe, 
Teach the numbers how to flow, 

Mournful as the moaning wind, 

Gentle as the rippling stream, 
Softly blowing, 
Smoothly flowing, 

Waking the fairy visions of the mind, 

And lulling to romantic dream — 
Till the music of thy notes, 

Stealing o'er the gurgling rill, 
Far on ether's bosom floats, 

Till thy murmurs gently flowing, 

Wake the echoes of the hill. 
Heav'nly sounds ! sweet peace bestowing, 

Bid each raging grief be still — 

Sing such sadder lays as ne'er 

Stole upon the slumb'ring ear 

Of the azure mantled night; 
While the Moon in cloudless glory, 

Throws around her silver light, 
List'ning to the plaintive story 

From her starry mansion bright. 



35 

Sweet Echo, in thy deep domain, 
Each sadly swelling note detain, 
And when Ianthe's hand is cold, 

And when her voice is still and mute, 
And when her griefs no more are told 

To warbling harp, or breathing lute, 
Sound again thy silver shell, 

Solemn silence sweetly breaking, 
By rushy stream and tangled dell, 

All thy sister echoes waking, 
Till ev'ry nymph of ev'ry brook, 

Rising from the limpid waves, 
Through their shadowy tresses look, 

And tiny fairies quit their mountain-caves. 

And if Ianthe's Harp, unstrung, 
Should 'mid these tuneless bow'rs be hung, 
Wilt thou revive the mournful strain, 
And wake its trembling notes again? 
Ah ! no, this grotto would be still, 
And mute the valley, mute the hill, 
Forgotten all the tender theme 
Of Edwin's love, of Edwin's fame — 
But, why, alas ! complain of thee 1 
Though on the bark of ev'ry tree 
This hand has 'grav'd my lover's name, 
The faithless trunk will soon decay, 
And ev'ry vestage wear away, 
E'en as the shadowy tints that deck life's morning dream ! 

Fond cares upon my earlier years, 
A father's anxious heart bestow'd : 



36 

With all a parent's hopes and fears, 

His kind paternal bosom glow'd. 
But, ah ! too soon Sir Edwin came, 

Blooming in manly youth and grace, 
The gentlest of his noble name, 

The bravest of his warlike race. 
We met ; and from that fated hour 

In either heart love glow'd divine; 
My Edwin sigh'd beneath its pow'r, 

And more than mutual pangs were mine. 

How oft enraptur'd on thy strains, 

Oh, soft-ton'd Harp! has Edwin hung; 
And oft of parted lovers' pains, 

In boding accents sweetly sung ; 
And when my ready starting tear 

Stream'd at the mournful story, 
Quick would he change the tale of fear, 

And sing the dazzling charms of glory, 
While ev'ry eager look express'd 
The martial fires that warm'd his breast. 

My father saw — a parent's curse 
Destroy'd the hopes we dar'd to nurse, 
Forbad the love our bosoms felt, 
Nor pray'rs could move, nor tears could melt; 
With threat'ning fury undisguis'd 

He chid the foul disgrace, 
For, oh ! my haughty sire despis'd 

Young Edwin and his race : 
Long had each house with hatred burn'd, 
Long at each prorfer'd union spurn'd, 



37 

And cherish 'd so their jealous fears, 

That malice grew with coming years. 

Too soon, alas! our hapless fate, 

A deadlier feud supplies, 
Confirms their unrelenting fate, 
And our's the sacrifice ! 

They tore me from my mother's breast, 

They tore me from that sacred home 
Where all my childish days were blest, 

And dragg'd me to yon cloister's gloom. 
Oh ! thou, who bear'st a father's name, 

To whose dear arms so oft I've sprung, 
When from the battle-field you came, 

And round your neck delighted hung— 
How could thy lips pronounce my doom, 
And force me to this living tomb ! 

My Edwin's frantic last adieu 

Still hangs upon mine ear ; 
Still on his manly cheek I view 

The agonizing tear. 
" Ianthe, ev'ry hope adieu ! 
For hope and pleasure die with you : 
I go to share the battle's toil, 
To mingle in its thickest broil ; 
Assur'd I never shall return 
Thy loss in ling' ring grief to mourn ! 
Oh J when amid the war-strife driv'n 
The welcome wound at length is giv'n 

That sets my spirit free ; — 



38 

The last faint pray'r I breathe to Heav'n 
Shall fondly whisper thee !" 

Adieu ! my brave, my gallant knight ! 
Thy sun hath set in early night — 
In Palestine's unhallow'd ground, 
Deform'd with many a ghastly wound, 

Thy mould'ring limbs are laid; 
Nor can Ianthe's footsteps tread 
Thy place of rest among the dead, 

To sing sweet requiems to thy parted shade. 

" And now the storm of grief is o'er, 

Yet melancholy's dewy eye" 
Still sheds its slow and silent show'r, 

And still I heave the ceaseless sigh ; 
And oft to this sequester'd spot 

At midnight's solemn hour I steal, 
To teach the echoes of the grot 

My tales of sorrow to reveal ; 
And muse on joys that ne'er return. — 
But Echo will forget to mourn ; 
And soon Ianthe's Harp unstrung, 
Tuneless shall 'mid these bow'rs be hung. 

But, hark ! I hear the matin bell 
Summon the holy train to pray'rs; — 

Immers'd in yonder gloomy cell, 

My thoughts, my heart, no more must dwell 
On wordly griefs, on worldly cares : 

Nor e'er the name of him I love 

Mix in my pray'rs to Heav'n above. 



39 

Melodious lyre! and must we part? 

Sweet solace of my hours of pain ! 
'Tis conscience whispers to my heart, 

And bids me cease the mournful strain. 
The sacred veil that round me flows, 

Reminds me of my solemn vow ; 
Nor must my heart indulge in woes, 

My tongue not dares to utter now. 
Deep, deep, within that constant heart 

My Edwin's image lies, 
Nor from my struggling soul shall part, 

In death's last agonies. 
But, ah ! his dear forbidden name 

No more must tremble on my tongue ; 
Nor grief like our's, and melancholy tale, 

Again by vestal lips be sung. 

Soft-ton'd Harp! Ianthe's treasure, 
Farewell to thy dulcet measure ! 
Though soft and slow 
Thy numbers flow, 
Ne'er again must sorrow's child 
Listen to thy music wild ; 

Ah ! never, never ! 
But take my last, long, ling' ring view; — 
And now thy trembling notes are still, 
And hush'd the echoes of the hill ; — 
Again, sweet Harp ! again adieu! 

Farewell, for ever! 



40 



ORPHAN JOAN. 



Th e blush of morn was on the sky, 

The fields were fair and green, 
The rippling streamlet murmur'd by, 

And bright was ev'ry scene ; 
Fresh o'er the fields the zephyr blows, 

Each eye with rapture shone; 
But vain the cloudless morning rose, 

And beam'd on orphan Joan. 

Pale was her cheek, and wild her eye, 

Loose flow'd her yellow hair, 
And oft her bosom heav'd the sigh;— 

Poor daughter of despair ! 
And cold and cheerless was the maid 

As thus she made her moan — 
" Is there no friend, no pitying aid, 

To save poor orphan Joan. 

I was a father's proud delight, 

A mother's tend'rest care ; 
Each day was jocund, calm each night, 

And ev'ry prospect fair; 
But soon of ev'ry joy bereft, 

Ere fourteen summers gone, 
No sire, no mother, was there left 

To guide the steps of Joan. 



41 

My only brother, far from home 

Pour'd forth his dearest blood, 
Ambition's dang'rous path to roam 

Through glory's crimson flood ; 
And all my father's little store, 

Regardless of my moan, 
Rapacious monsters fiercely tore, 

From poor deserted Joan. 

No friend in all the world I had, 

To snatch me from despair ; 
And soon my brain was wild and mad,— 

The dreadful sleep of care ! 
Returning reason but restor'd 

My broken heart to groan, 
Nor would the world one smile afford, 

To soothe the griefs of Joan. 

And now I wander day by day, 

Soft pity's boon to crave; 
And weep each dreary night away, 

Upon my parents' grave : 
No hope, no comfort, now remains, 

For ev'ry friend is gone ; — 
And all unpitied are the pains 

That wring the heart of Joan." 

Thus all day long the mourner sat, 

Like drooping dying flow'r, 
And wept and mourn'd her hapless fate, 

Till ev'ning's silent hour. 



42 

At length a stranger passing by 

Was startled by her groan ; 
He turn'd, with pity in his eye, 

To look on orphan Joan. 

" Oh ! gentle maid! what heavy grief, 

Thus swells thy labouring breast, 
Say, can I bring thy woes relief, 

Or give thy sorrows rest?" 
" Ah ! no relief my pangs can know, 

To hush my bosom's moan,- — 
Yet soon my tears shall cease to flow, 

For Death will pity Joan." 

With wild amaze the stranger gaz'd 

Upon the weeping maid, 
When slow her sinking head she raised, 

And thus dejected said : — 
" Yet, think not gratitude denied, 

To thee, that all unknown r" 

e< Eternal Heav'n I" the youth replied, 

" 'Tis she, — my sister Joan !" 

He press'd her to his beating breast; — 

" Oh ! ever lov'd and dear ! 
Revive, and once again be blest, 

And dry each falling tear. 
And is it thus that thou art found 

Neglected and alone ; 
No friend to soothe the pangs that wound 

The gentle heart of Joan 2 



43 

But honour, wealth, and fame are mine ; 

Nor Heav'n in vain bestow'd, 
For, ah ! to make those blessings thine, 

How oft this heart has glow'd ! 
Then let it be my tend'rest care 

To hush each anxious moan — 
And, oh ! may fond affection's prayer 

Restore sweet health to Joan." 

Soft as the balmy dews of night 

His cheering accents fell, 
And bade once more each dear delight 

The orphan's bosom swell. 
Fraternal love, domestic care, 

For all her griefs atone ; 
And plenty, comfort, love, and peace, 

Now smile on happy Joan. 

9«« 



ELOIZA. 



Th e silver Moon, pale queen of starry night, 

Hangs in the firmament her crescent bright ; 

Millions of stars the azure concave stud, 

And tiny fairies trip along the wood ; 

The streamlet gurgling o'er its shallow bed, 

To Cynthia glances through the chequer'd shade; 



44 

All, all is hush'd in soft and calm repose, 
And scarce a zephyr wooes the fragrant rose; 
And mortal eyes in heavy slumber seal'd, 
Now trace in dreams the future fate reveal'd. 

And is each eye in heavy slumber clos'd 1 
And is each form on tranquil couch repos'd?— 
Does no rude sorrow banish gentle sleep, 
And leave the wretch through the long night to weep? 
Ah, me ! from many an eye the dewy charm 
Is wash'd away by tears, and wild alarm ! 
Remorseless mem'ry holds unwearied sway, 
And gives to night the restlessness of day. 

But who is she, that with her beauteous arms 
Cross'd on her heaving bosom's snowy charms, 
Thus with quick step and throbbing breast is seen, 
Wand'ring like airy sprite the dewy green? 
But she can shed no tear, and breathe no sigh; — 
See! vacant frenzy flashes in her eye! 
Oh ! why should reason and her happy train 
Forsake that soul unsullied by a stain? — 

Poor Eloiza was no vulgar maid, 
Though nurs'd by nature in the rural shade ; 
Her face and form were lovely, and her mind 
Was virtuous, modest, noble, frank, and kind ; — 
No lurking ill her spotless bosom knew; 
Her virtues many, and her errors few. — 
And could not beauty, worth, and youth combin'd, 
Insure their blessings to so pure a mind ! — 



45 

Young Hargrave came, the abject slave of goid ; 
And in her ear deceitful story told ; 
With subtle fraud assum'd each grace refin'd, 
And only prais'd the beauties of her mind ; 
Practis'd each wily stratagem to move 
Her tender pity, and to win her love ; 
Nor woo'd in vain ; and Eloiza's heart 
Too soon confess'd the triumph of his art. 
But when he found no wealth could e'er reward 
His boasted passion, and his feign'd regard, 
He fled — and left her wretched and betray'd, 
To court a richer, not a lovelier maid. 

And now, alas! when heav'n's refulgent fires 
Are lighted up, and weary man retires 
To taste the pleasures of refreshing sleep, 
Poor Eloiza wakes to watch and weep. — 
Beneath yon wood's impervious shade she roves, 
The gloomy haunt that Eloiza loves ; 
Or by yon cataract's tremendous height, 
That sparkling, flashing to the moon's pale light., 
Roars down its rocky channel ; and at eve, 
Where rippling waves the sandy sea-beach lave, 
Oft is she seen her hasty steps to urge 
Along the margin of the murm'ring surge; 
Or, careless hanging o'er some craggy steep, 
Wash'd by the foamy billows of the deep, 
List'ning, with vacant eye, to the loud roar 
Of restless waves against the rocky shore. 
No parent now remains her griefs to soothe, 
No youthful friend her rugged couch to smooth, 



46 

No brother's aid her wand'ring steps to guide, 
No cheering home her wretched limbs to hide ; 
Alone, uncomforted, her feeble form 
Is left unsheltered to the ruthless storm. 

But thou, oh, Hargrave ! author of her woes, 
Canst thou enjoy the sweetness of repose ? 
Say, does not oft that faded form appear 
Beside thy bed, and claim the gushing tear ; 
Telling thy dreams the woe she doth endure, 
Griefs without hope, and pangs without a cure? 
For say, canst thou her blighted peace restore, 
Or bid distemper'd reason shine once more 1 — 
Ah ! no, — remorse and anguish soon shall seize 
Thy faithless heart, and break thy fancied ease; — 
Her wrongs, her woes, shall haunt thee night and day, 
And drive each comfort from thy soul away; 
While she above each earthly care shall rise, 
And pitying, view thee from her native skies. 



WILLIAM AND SUSAN. 



How happy are the charming pair 
That live in yon romantic glen ! 

For Susan is the loveliest fair, 
And William is the best of men. 



47 



When spring or summer decks the year. 
When lambkins urge their joyful pranks, 

And flow'rs their budding beauties rear, 
On the smooth streamlet's grassy banks; 

From ev'ry shrub that scents the air, 
He plucks a blossom wet with dew ? 

And with it forms a garland fair, 
To grace the chesnut locks of Sue. 

Then on the turf supinely laid, 

No ruffling care to vex his mind, 
He sings his lovely cottage-maid, 

For ever fair, for ever kind. 

The song is simple as the swain; 

He chaunts in wild untutored lays, 
The pleasures of the rural plain, 

And chaunts them all to Susan's praise. 

" Oh! come, my love! the spring returns; 

I hear her herald in the grove, 
The shepherd's breast with rapture burns, 

And all is harmony and love. 

What countless beauties paint the scene, 
The rural scene still form'd to please; 

Where virtue, love, and friendship reign, 
Where dwell contentment, health, and ease ! 

We'll wander up yon woodland hill, 

Where spring's sweet infant breezes blow ; 



48 

And seated by some murm'ring rill, 
Muse on the varied charms below. 

The stream that smoothly winds along, 
On whose blue breast the zephyrs sleep ; 

The shepherd's pipe, the milk-maid's song, 
The distant valley white with sheep ! 

The fairest flow'rs that Flora yields, 
To deck thy wavy locks 111 bring ; 

For thee III rove the dewy fields, 
And gather all the sweets of spring. 

And there the violet shall try 

To match thine eyes' celestial blue; 

The rose-bud's op'ning blush shall vie 
With thy fair cheek's soft vermeil-hue. 

The mountain-daisy there shall spread 
Its bosom white as Alpine snow, 

To match thy neck, my lovely maid, 

But, ah ! 'twill want that breathing glow. 

And all their rival charms combin'd, 
Their varied sweets and mingled grace, 

Alike shall emulate thy mind, 
E'en as they emulate thy face !" 

Thus William sang — the echoing hills 
Reply the raptures of the swain, 

And smoother flow the murm'ring rills, 
While smiling Sue approves the strain. 



49 

No jealous doubts disturb his heart, 
Where easy truth delights to dwell; 

For simple she, and void of art, 
The modest maid he loves so well. 

Nor let the pride of pow'r and wealth 
Despise their humble birth and fame, 

For their 1 s are competence and health ; 
And .what are titles but a name ? 

An empty name, as light as air, 

Unless with worth and virtue join'd ; — 

Can titles break the bonds of care? 
Can these enlarge the narrow mind ? 

But virtue, like the tow'ring oak, 

Lifts her tall head, the forest's pride ; 

The raging storm, the whirlwind's shock, 
Fall weak and harmless at her side. 

Vice, like some frail and gaudy flow'r, 
Spreads her broad bosom to the sun, 

But ere the ev'ning's silent hour, 
Is wither'd, perish'd, and undone. 



50 



THE DISTRACTED MOTHER. 



Peace forsakes my throbbing bosom- 
Reason flies my bursting brain- 
Mercy, Heav'n! and must I lose him; 
Never see my child again ! 

Hark ! yon shriek that loudly floated 
On the gale, so piercing wild — 

'Tis the voice on which I doated — 
'Tis my darling, only child ! 

Still I see his bosom bleeding — 
Stretch'd upon his early bier:— 

Mothers I when my tale is reading, 
Drop the sympathetic tear. 

Edward was my pride and pleasure ; 

Graceful grew my manly boy; 
All his mind a fund of treasure — 

Seat of innocence and joy. 

But my Edward, hVd by glory, 
Fled my fond protecting arms ; 

Sigh'd for fame in honour's story, 
Sigh'd for battle's wild alarms. 



51 

Hark ! I hear the battle raging ; 

Groans of anguish rend the air ;— ■ 
Now my boy the war is waging, 

Deaf to all ray wild despair. 

On Corunna's plain surrounded 
By the fierce relentless foe, 

There I saw him, pale and wounded, 
Sink beneath the fatal blow. 



See Death's tyrant hand is shading 
Darkly now each matchless grace ; 

See the roses, quickly fading, 
Vanish from my Edward's face ! 

Oh ! my heart will burst with sighing ; 

Bleeds my bosom's inmost core — 
There I saw him pale and dying, 

Stiffening, welt'ring in his gore. 

All my steps are mark'd with slaughter, 

Blood of him I call'd my Son : 
See, his pale form follows after; — 

Edward, Edward, art thou gone ! 

Come, my child — but, ah! what sadness 

Sits upon thy youthful front 1 
Hide those bloody wounds ! — Oh, madness ! 

Hide that rapier's streaming point ! 



5*2 

Shall I never more behold thee^ 
Dearest treasure of my breast* 

Never in my arms enfold thee, 
Never to thy lips be prest? 

Yet my starting eyes are tearless, 
And my burning cheeks are dry- 

Raging frenzy makes me fearless— 
Whither, whither, shall I fly? 

Mark ! a radiant train attending, 
Edward mounts the vaulted sky; — 

See the blazing pomp ascending, 
Far above the stars they fly. 

Stop, my child, I come to meet thee- 
Stop, my love, my darling boy ! 

Keep thy sweetest smile to greet me 
In those realms of endless joy. 

There no bloody hand shall part us, 
There no ruffian force I'll fear, — 

Angels there shall safely guard us, 
Hush each sigh, and dry each tear* 



53 

THE SOLDIER'S WIDOW 

AT THE GRAVE OF HER ONLY CHILD. 



"In vain for me may summer's glow 
Make blooming nature smile ; 

In vain may all the charms of spring 
Adorn our happy isle ; 

In vain for me may zephyrs kiss 

The lily's spotless breast ; 
In vain for me the blushing rose 

In beauty's garb be dress'd ; 

In vain for me may pebbly brooks 
And winding streamlets run ; 

In vain for me the rising morn, 
In vain the setting sun. 

My world is yonder little grave, 

My all its narrow space ; 
My only child reposes there, 

Lock'd in Death's cold embrace. 

Yet peace is thine, sweet innocent ! 

By care nor grief oppressed ; 
Thou sleep' st regardless of the pangs 

That rend thy mother's breast. 
D3 



54 

Unconscious babe ! I would not wish 

Thy deep repose to break; 
Better in peace to slumber there, 

Than like thy mother wake. 

Sleep on, sleep on, my darling babe ! 

Till Heav'n's resistless voice 
Shall rouse the slumb'rers of the tomb, 

And bid thy soul rejoice. 

Sweet child ! thine infant eyes had scarce 

Beheld life's op'ning dawn, 
Than thou wert fatherless, and I 

A widow left forlorn. 

Nor e'en the last sad grief was giv'% 

His dying form to see ; 
He fell upon a foreign shore, 

Unwept by all but me. 

Henry! thy nature suited ill 

The battle's stormy rage — 
Then wherefore go, my only love, 

The bloody war to wage ! 

How|happier I, didst thou repose 

Beside our infant son, 
Than buried thus in field of strife, 

Where bloody deeds were done. 



55 

But, ah ! to heav'n's eternal throne 
My ceaseless pray'r shall rise, 

That yet our parted souls may meet 
In yonder blissful skies." 

She paus'd — for now the glimmering east 
Disturb'd the friendly gloom; 

Then slowly sought with bleeding heart 
Her chang'd and cheerless home. 



THE MANIAC. 



*' Say, pensive fair one, whither bound i 
Whose jetty locks, with cypress crown'd, 
Throw round thy face a mournful gloom, 
That ill-befits thy rosy bloom." 

" Dost thou not know," the maid reply'd, 
" How Lewis bled — how Lewis died — 
And in the silent grave was laid, 
And sleeps beneath the cypress shade? 

Stretch'd on the green-wood's verdant breast 
His gentle form is laid at rest; 
And far above yon azure skies, 
On angel-wing his spirit flies. 



56 

No smile shall on my cheek appear : — 
But hark ! my lover's voice I hear — ■ 
' Oh ! come Eudora ! come away ; 
'Tis Lewis chides thy ling'ring stay : 

The silence of the grave is bless'd, 
Where all our cares and wand'rings rest : 
Oh ! come Eudora — haste away/ — 
I come, I come — sweet spirit ! stay V 

She said ; and where yon grey oaks spread 
Their leafy shade she bow'd her head, 
And, sinking on the green earth, sigh'd 
Her murder'd lover's name, and died ! 

— -M»M4 — 



THE RURAL WALK. 



" Come, Sarah, let us range the grove, 
And taste the sweets that nature yields ; 

Admire her charms where'er we rove— 
O'er mountain top, or verdant fields. 

Behold yon cliffs where groves of pine 
Scarce wave their dark-green drooping heads ; 

Behold yon blooming fertile meads 

Where straggling wild flow'rs make their beds; 



57 

And see, my Sarah, yonder rose 

Protected by its native thorns- 
Sweet emblem of the lovely maid 

Whom virtue guards, and truth adorns." 

*' And see yon stream so bright and smooth, 
Where oft, as carelessly we rove, 

You've vow'd in Sarah's listening ear 
Eternal constancy and love." 

Her hand the swain enraptur'd caught ; — 
" Dear maid, that stream shall cease to flow 

Ere Richard can forget those vows, 
Or Sarah's matchless charms forego!" 

The maiden smil'd, and from her breast 
A little blooming nosegay drew — 

" These flow'rs may wither, droop, and fade, 
But ne'er this heart shall prove untrue." 



HARRIET. 



Calm as yon stream's pellucid breast, 
That down the winding valley flows, 

By health and innocence caress'd, 
The dayspring of my life arose. 
D 5 



58 

My looks were fresh as yonder flow'r 
That blushes on its parent thorn, 

Peace smil'd upon my midnight hour, 
And waken'd with the purple morn. 

But, ah ! disguis'd in friendship's mien, 
Insidious love assail'd my breast ; 

Destroy'd each brighter, fairer scene, 
And robb'd my soul of peace and rest. 

I found him full of anxious fears, 

Of cares and doubts an endless train ; 

The herald of my future tears, 
The harbinger of future pain. 

The verdant fields, the azure skies, 
The dimpled brook, and leafy grove, 

Have been the witness of his sighs, 
The list'ners of his plighted love. 

But since he falsely can forsake 

The heart 'twas once his pride to gain, 

That heart shall now in silence break, 
Nor let him triumph hi its pain. 

Perhaps, when death these eyes shall close, 
My faithless Edward yet may mourn, 

May think him then of all my woes, 
And weep, too late, on Harriet's urn. 



59 



ETHELINDA. 



** In vain, bright Sun! thou shinest here, 
For him thou canst not shine upon, 

That to this aching breast was dear, 
And, ah ! for ever, ever gone ! 

The long, dull ev'ning pleases more, 
When in some dark sequester'd room 

I sit, and hear the tempest roar, 

And mourn amid th' unsocial gloom. 

He was the dearest, tend'rest friend! 

With him each joy, each pleasure dies; 
Ah me! what pangs my bosom rend — 

Cold in his bloody grave he lies. 

Oh ! fate too early and severe ! 

Detested war! the work was thine; 
And never maiden's gushing tear 

Bewail'd a loss so deep as mine. 

Oh I do not mock my downcast eye, 
Nor rudely scoff with bitter scorn, 

To hear th' involuntary sigh 

Burst from a heart with anguish torn. 



60 

Oh! Slander, let thy tongue be still,— 
Yet speak — thy tort'ring pow'r is o'er ; 

Revile, and load with ev'ry ill 

The heart which thou canst pain no more. 

'Tis past — but can it be a crime 
To weep a lover's timeless end, 

And dedicate life's early prime 

To mourn so true, so dear a friend 1 

Why o'er a friend's cold ashes mourn 1 
Why weep a parent's death to see? 

Why languish at a husband's urn 1 — 
Oh! he was all and all to me. 

Then wound not more my broken peace, 
Nor trample thus on bruised reed; 

For, ah ! till life, till mem'ry cease, 
This widow'd heart must ever Weed. 

And thou, bright Sun, withdraw thy rays; 

Nor hope, nor solace, they impart ; — 
Unjoyous scenes, and cheerless days, 

Are fitter for an aching heart." 

Thus, all dejected, weak, and pale, 

The mourning Ethelinda lay ; 
And sigh'd her moanings to the gale 

That temper'd now the sultry day. 



61 

Her once so fair and polish'd form, 
On the green turf was careless laid ; 

And on her cheek, grief's canker-worm 
Had beauty's half-blown rose decay'd. 

In vain for her the summer sun 

With more than wonted splendour shone ; 
To her his beams were dark and dun — 

With Arthur all her hopes had gone! 

She rose to quit the smiling scene, — 
For her, alas ! no charms it wore ; 

And slowly pac'd the flow'ry green 
So oft had Arthur trod before. 

When, lo ! before the mournful maid 

Bent a poor aged son of war, 
Wrapp'd in his tatter'd Highland plaid, 

And seam'd with many a ghastly scar. 

" Oh) lady ! gentle lady ! stay, 
A poor old soldier bends the knee ; 

Weary and long has been the way, 

And youth and strength have gone from me. 

From Spain's ensanguined fields I roam, 
Where valour's desp'rate deeds are done; 

Where glory's greenest laurels bloom 
Around the brows of Wellington. 



62 



Wounded and weak, I wend my way 
To my dear native Highland land ;— 

Yet, ere I go, this charge convey 
In safety, lady, to your hand." 

Heav'ns ! what emotions shook her frame, 
When her own picture met her view ; 

The same — oh, yes !^— the very same 
She gave him with her last adieu ! 

She wept ; her snowy hands she rung, 
And call'd in anguish on his name, — 

Till round the woodland echoes rung, 

And sadly sigh'd — " Oh ! Arthur Graham ! 



She gaz'd upon the soldier's face — 

His trembling hand the mask withdrew- 

And blooming bright in youthful grace, 
Her Arthur's form again she knew. 

He threw the Highland plaid aside, 

And clasp'd her to his gallant breast: — 

" Oh ! my best love, my promis'd bride !— 
And am I then so sweetly blest ! 

So bless'd in Ethelinda's faith, 

And love, — more dear to him than life !- 
Yes— dearer than the empty breath 
Of honour, won in fields of strife. 



63 

No bloody grave has Arthur found, 

Nor hurt — but this poor shatter'd knee; — 

And thou, my love, shalt nurse the wound 
That brings me back to love and thee." 

Now roseate blushes once again 

Mantle on Ethelinda's face, 
Joy sparkled in her alter'd mien, 

And wak'd once more each vanished grace. 

Soon to his native Highland land, 

Young Arthur led his beauteous bride ; 

And love and glory, hand in hand, 

Walk'd by the youthful chieftain's side. 

And loud the Highland echoes rung 
From hill to hill, with mirth and joy ; 

The old bard woke his harp, and sung 
The mountain tale " of days gone by." 

And praise and blessings flow'd around 
From humble love, and high-born pride ; 

Nor could a happier pair be found 
Than Arthur and his lovely bride. 



64 



THE FAIRY OF THE WOOD. 



Ah ! wherefore droops yon lovely flow'r, 
The pride of Highland hill and glade, 

That blush' d erewhile in Ronald's bow'r, 
And smil'd amid the green-wood shade? 

And why those blue eyes sunk, and sad, 
And fled those blushes like the morn, 

With which her lily cheek was clad, 
Bright as the red-rose on its thorn?' 

And why, with pensive steps and slow, 

Loves she to wander all alone, 
Where loud the mountain torrents flow, 

And deep winds through the forest groan ? 

Ah! why, but that these woods among, 
As deep entranc'd in thought she stood, 

Unearthly music round her rung, 
Wak'd by the Fairy of the Wood ? 

" All ear " she stood, to list the strain, 
That softly floated on the breeze; — 

Sweeter than aught that poets feign 
Of mermaid's song o'er moonlight seas. 



65 



Where'er she turn'd, where'er she mov'd, 
Still on her ear the witch-notes rung; 

And hapless Mary sigh'd and lov'd, 
While thus the unseen spirit sung : — 

u Oh ! come, thou loveliest, sweetest flow'r, 
That ever met the sunny beam ; 

The fairest thing in mortal bow'r, 

And purer than the mountain stream ! 

Oh! I have watch'd thy rising morn, 
With anxious love and tender care ; 

Have shown the rose — but hid the thorn, 
And led thy steps from ev'ry snare. 

Oh ! wilt thou come, and share the bow'r, 
Prepar'd for thee by viewless hand, 

And thou shall bloom the sweetest flow'r, 
That ever smil'd in Fairy land. 

I'll bear thee on the zephyr's wing, 
While yet the moon is glimm'ring pale, 

To regions of eternal spring, 

Where music breathes in ev'ry gale, 

I'll waft thee o'er the murm'ring sea, 
Soft on some fleecy cloud reclin'd, 

To dwell in Fairy vales with me, 

And leave the haunts of humankind. 



66 

No jarring strife shall there molest^ 

But Spirits gentle as thy own 
Shall greet thee to their bow'rs of rest, 

With golden harps of heav'nly tone. 

There streams of living waters flow, 
And gales of incense breathe around ; 

There genial suns for ever glow, 

And flow'rs that fade not strew the ground 

There beauty blooms with angel mien, 
And virtue smiles immortal there; 

No sighs are heard, no tears are seen, 
Nor want, nor pain, nor toilsome care. 

Then haste, and share the fragrant bow'r, 
Prepar'd for thee by viewless hand, 

And thou shalt live the sweetest flow'r 
That ever bloom 7 d in Fairy land." 

Here ceas'd the harp's wild notes to sing, 
Yet still on Mary's heart they stray'd ; 

And much she wish'd to see the string, 
And see the magic hand that play'd. 

Soft, soft it fell, as summer show'rs, 
When languid nature drooping lies ; 

Sweet as the breath of balmy flow'rs, 
When o'er their breast the zephyr sighs. 



But— shall she from her home depart, 
To range in quest of worlds unknown? 

Say, shall she pierce her mother's heart, 
And leave her aged sire to groan 1 

" Ah ! no, it cannot, must not be ;— 
Cease, cease thou tempter ! cease to play V' 

e< Mary — farewell — rempmber me V — 
The Spirit sigh'd, and fled away. 

She heard the softly-rustling wing 
Light winnowing the ambient air; 

She touch'd the passing wild-harp's string — 
And pale she turn'd as lily fair. 

From that sad hour she wanders still 

Where torrents roll, and deep winds groan, 

And seems to hear from distant hill 
Her fairy-lover's wild-harp's tone. 

Oh ! was it but some airy dream, 

A vision of the fever'd mind, 
The murmur of the distant stream, 
Or moaning of the passing wind ? 

Ah ! no, — it was no airy dream, 

No vision of the fever'd mind, 
No murmur of the distant stream, 

Nor moaning of the passing wind. 



68 

It was a voice, a voice of love ! 

It was a harp of heav'nly tone, 
It was a sound the soul to move, 

A spirit, Mary ! like thine own. 

But never more did Mary hear 

The wild-harp echoing through the wood ; 
Though still she weeps and wanders there, 

And pines in melancholy mood. 

Thus droops and fades the lovely flow'r, 
The pride erewhile of hill and glade, . 

That blush'd so sweet in Ronald's bow'r, 
And smil'd amid the green-wood shade. 



THE MAID OF THULE. 



" Farewell for ever, best belov'd! — 
His voice shall meet mine ear no more,- 

Too long believ'd, too faithless prov'd, 
He hastens from this friendly shore. 

And soon, in England's happy land, 
A richer, fairer nymph shall find ; 

But, ah ! not one to yield her hand, 
With warmer heart, or purer mind. 



69 

Be still, thou deep ; — ye fav'ring gales 
Breathe lightly o'er the murm'ring wave ; 

Fill with soft breath my lover's sails, 
And waft him far from Ellen's grave. 

Ah ! wherefore did ye waft him here, 
To rend a luckless maiden's heart ? 

But I will wipe the gushing tear : — 
He cannot act so base a part ! 

Not many moons have lit the sky, 
Nor silver'd yonder peaceful sea, 

Since first I saw the vessel nigh, 

That bore such joy, such grief to me. 

v 
Long had th' Atlantic billows beat 

Their gallant bark on wintry seas ; 
And long had been their cruise, and bleak, 

Till spring awoke the western breeze. 

Then safely anchored in this bay, 

Too well their young commander strove 

To steal my simple heart away, 

And cloud my future days with love. 

And will he spurn each plighted vow, 
And leave me broken-hearted here? 

But, hush, my doubts and terrors now— 
He comes my drooping soul to cheer I" 



70 

Thus Ellen, on the beach reclin'd, 
View'd the tall bark, with dewy eye, 

Her sails unfurling to the wind 
That from the north came whistling by. 

And as she gaz'd in wild despair, 
The boat advances to the land; 

She sees the gallant hero there, 
And soon he springs upon the strand. 

His was each youthful, manly grace, 
But his the giddy wand'ring mind, 

That found a love in ev'ry place, 
And shifted with the shifting wind. 

Poor Ellen's was the fondest heart, 
Forin'd all to tenderness and love, 

And free from ev'ry little art, 
And mild and gentle as the dove. 

" Farewell, sweet maid ! farewell !" he cried, 
" On you may love and rapture smile, 

While I the boist'rous billows ride, 
Far, far from you, and Thule's isle. 

Old Ocean's bosom is my home, 
And war the mistress I must woo ; 

For you may thornless roses bloom — 
Sweet Thulean maid ! adieu, adieu I" 



71 

No weak complaint escap'd her lip, 
For burning pride suppressed the sigh ; 

Till far, far off the gallant ship 
Seem'd fading in the distant sky. 

But stretch'd on the lone beach she lay, 
Watching the slowly fading sail, 

Till evening wrapp'd in shadows grey 
The mossy hill, and misty vale. 

Pale grew her cheek, more deadly pale ! 

And lustreless her closing eye; 
And there the moaning midnight gale 

Receiv'd the Thulean maid's last sigh, 



POOR IDA. 



" Ah! vain essay, to cheat the heavy hour 
With music's charms — it cannot, will not be ! 

Too well, alas! this bosom feels thy pow'r, 
And ev'ry thought concentrates still in thee. 

Oh, Henry ! shall I never tear thy form 
From this believing and deluded heart — 

Still must my soul endure the mental storm, 
And weep for thee till life itself depart ! 



72 

When on this faded cheek, this heaving breast, 
Death's icy hand with fatal touch is laid ; 

Say wilt thou wander by my bed of rest, 
And drop one tear o'er thy forsaken maid? 

Say, when eternal slumber seals those eyes, 

That scarcely dar'd thy tender glance to meet, 

Will yet a thought within thy bosom rise 
Of her who moulders in her winding sheet? 

When cold the hand, oft fondly press'd in vain, 
That trembled still thy pressure to return, 

That feebly pens this last sad parting strain, 
Shall lie inactive in a nameless urn ; 

Wilt thou not weep? or can thy harden'd heart 
Nor aught of love, nor tender pity, feel 

For her who sinks the victim of thy art, 

And dies her wrongs and anguish to conceal ! 

Behold me hasf ning to the silent tomb, 

And thou, the murd'rer of my peace and fame ; 

Yet uncomplaining will I bear my doom, 

Nor load with one reproach thy cherish'd name. 

May Heav'n forgive thee, as I now forgive, 

And love and joy yet wait, dear youth! on thee: 

Yet, oh! my Henry! when I cease to live, 

Think, sometimes think, upon my love and me !" 



73 

Poor Ida ceas'd — for through her shudd'ring frame 
The blood ran cold, the pulse forgot to play ; 

O'er her dim closing eyes dark shadows came, 
And pale in death the lovely victim lay. 

Beneath this turf poor Ida's form is laid — 
Stop, gentle fair! the pitying tear is due; 

For know, that once the broken-hearted maid 
Was happy, fair, and innocent as you ! 



THE SPECTRE OF THE LAKE. 



Th e moon-beams shone on the silent lake, 

The night was deadly still; 
Not a breath of wind made the tall trees shake, 
Not a sound was heard the echoes to wake, 

As the mist crept over the hill. 

Sir Geraid, a knight from the Holy Land, 

Journeying his course alone, 
Led his weary horse o'er the moonlight sand ; 
Since last he had trod the well-known strand, 

Full seven long years were gone. 






74 

He had left a wife of matchless charms, 

And matchless goodness too ; 
With their infant son in her circling amis. 
When he sought the battle's wild alarms 

Where the holy banner flew. 

•' And wilt thou leave me V she madly cried, 
" And this infant pledge of bliss ! — 

O Gerald, Gerald ! woe will betide 

The hour I am sever'd from thy side, 
And receive thy parting kiss ! 

Those lips thou shalt never kiss again" — 

" Oh! hush thee, my dearest life! 
Would Emma her Gerald's honour stain, 
And thus with a tear his steps detain, 

From the glorious field of strife V 

Drooping and pale as the lily flow'r 

Lady Emma blanch'd away; 
While he invok'd each heavenly pow'r 
To guard and watch her in evil hour ; 

Then tore himself quick away. 

On Palestine's plain he had fought and bled, 

And long a captive lay ; 
And now with sweet hopes, and a heart right glad, 
Homeward his weary way he sped, 

To his native mountains grey. 



75 

His heart beat high, as a castle gay 

Peep'd through the leaves so green 
Of a wood, that skirted the mountain grey, 
At whose foot the broad lake slumb'ring lay, 
And reflected the tranquil scene. 

For the lofty tow'rs that shone so bright 

In the moonshine, were his own ; 
And faster he urg'd with a fond delight, 
When, lo ! the silence of the night 

Was broke by a heavy moan. 

it floated o'er the stilly wave 

On the viewless wings of air, 
Like the wailings from some unhallow'd grave, 
When th' unrequiem'd spirit is heard to rave, 

O'er the mould'ring body there. 

And slowly appear'd on the silvery lake 

A phantom, gaunt and dread ; 
In Sir Gerald's bosom what horrors wake, 
As its bloody tresses it seem'd to shake, 

And rose from its oozy bed ! 

Its shadowy form was wrapp'd in white, 

All stain'd and spotted with gore, 
And round it a pale sepulchral light 
Qlean/d, while the moon hid her lustre bright, 
As the Spectre advanc'd to the shore. 



it 



76 

Livid and pale in her gory vest 

A murder'd babe was laid ; 
Its infant form seem'd fondly press'd, 
With many a sigh, to her bleeding breast, 

As thus to the knight she said:— 

Haste ! haste thee, belov'd one ! the murd'rer is there, 

And blood for blood must flow; 
'Tis Robert, false Robert, thy kinsman and heir: 
Oh! haste thee — the furies his mansion prepare 

In the courts of death below. 



Behold this wound in thy Emma's breast! 

Behold thy murder'd son! — 
No holy grave have our bodies press'd, 
No requiem been suing for our spirits' rest, 

Since the deed of death was done. 

For when silence and slumber wrapp'd the world 

In midnight's deepest gloom, 
Thy hapless wife and thy babe were hurl'd, 
Far on the lake where the blue-wave curl'd, 

To sleep in a wat'ry tomb. 

But my hour is pass'd, and I must be gone—, 

Oh, Gerald! remember me! — 
Remember thy wife, and thy infant son, 
And let masses be said, and due rites be done 

As Heav'n shall have mercy on thee ! 



ft 

And holy and just be thy actions here, 

Fitting thy faith and creed ! 
Stay the widow's moan, and the orphan's tear, 
And the weary pilgrim with welcome cheer, 

And thou shalt be bless' d indeed. 



And I will prepare, as thus thou prove, 

An unfading chaplet for thee; 
And thy boy shall greet thee in realms above, 
And there we shall live in eternal love, 

From guilt and from sorrow free." 

The lily of death on her cheek gave place 

To more than mortal charms ; 
And beauty beam'd with celestial grace, 
On her seraph form and angel face, 

While a cherub smil'd in her arms. 



Brighter than day's meridian glow 

Her garments swept the ground, 
O'er her polish'd neck, more dazzling than snow, 
Her golden tresses profusely flow, 

And breathe rich fragrance round. 

From a thousand strings harmonious strains 

Seem'd all around to wake ; 
Sounds that might soothe the direst pains, 
Floated afar o'er the hills and plains, 
As she vanished away on the lake. 
# ****** -* 

E 3 



78 



Cold the dew9 of morning shone 
On the fragrant shrubs and flow'rs, 

When Sir Gerald, with many a heavy moan ? 

Spurr'd his weary courser on, 
Till he reach'd his castle tow'rs. 



Sir Gerald's sword was sharp and bright, 

And blood for blood must flow ; 
His arm was strong, for his cause was right, 
And in combat he slew the murd'rous knight, 

Sir Robert, his deadly foe. 

His wide domains to the church he gave ; 

And in solitude and pray'r, 
In a monastry built by the lake's blue wave, 
He sigh'd, and thought on his Emma's grave- 

And soon he join'd her there. 

•» 
Peace to the soul of Sir Gerald the brave, 

And Emma the fair and good ! 
Near yonder ruins, where pine-trees wave, 
The peasants point to Sir Gerald's grave, 

And Emma's beneath the flood. 



*jr*+e»v*- 



79 



THE WEDDING-DAY OF ALBERT; 

A NORTHERN TALE, 



Bright sparkled Albert's dark-blue eye, 

Like the lake's pure breast, when all is still, 
And not a breeze is heard to sigh 

O'er the marshy moor, or the mossy hill. 

Graceful and tall was his manly form, 

As the pine on the banks of his native Glomin ; 

And but for the sun-beam, or winter storm, 

His blush had been bright as the blush of woman. 
But these a manlier brown had spread 
O'er the snowy white and the ruby red- 
Yet still was the native tint display'd 
Where the parted curls profusely play'd. 

Bright as the day, at Albert's side, 
Matilda sat, his beauteous bride ; 
The wealthiest maid on northern strand — 
A monarch might have sought her hand S 
Her princely port and lofty air, 
And her eye of piercing jet, declare 
The haughty heart that ill could brook 
On less than a prince with love to look — 
But love had tam'd her soul of pride, 

And soften'd her heart of stone ; 
And long had she sigh'd to be Albert's bride, 

And sigh'd for him alone. 



80 



Pledge of a dying mother's love, 

A doating father's richest treasure, 
Long had her moments been taught to move 

In one continued round of pleasure ! 
Torn from the bosom of the mine 

For her the diamond lent its glow; 
And Ocean's pearly gems entwine 

Her polish'd arms and neck of snow, 
Or sparkle in her raven hair, 

Whose spiral tresses darkly waving 
Perfum'd the gently flutt'ring air, 

That fann'd her bosom, proudly heaving. 

Though Danish lord, and Swedish knight, 

And many a Norway baron bold, 
Essay'd to win this lady bright, 
To tempt her ear, to charm her sight, 

Still, still her heart was proud and cold : 
No answ'ring throb of love she felt, 
Nor sigh, nor tear, her soul could melt. 

From woods and wilds where Glomin roll'd 

His broad blue billows to the main, 
Young Albert came, a warrior bold, 

In good Lord Norman's gallant train : 
And in the bloody field of strife, 

Had won a name, by birth denied, 
And twice had sav'd Lord Norman's life, 

When bravely fighting by his side. 
The aged warrior's heart was warm, 
Though time unnerv'd his stalwart arm— 



81 

Charm'd with his deeds of valour done, 
He lov'd young Albert as his son ; 
Nor lov'd him less because his mind 
Was noble, tender, and refin'd ; 
Nor frown'd to hear Matilda sigh, 
Or mark her alter'd down-cast eye. 

" Sweet flow'r ! the last that's left to bloom 

On ancient Norman's withering tree ; 
And shall thy father harshly doom 

A life of hopeless love to thee ? 
Ah, no ! though mean young Albert's birth, 

His soul is noble as thy own ; 
The proudest princess on the earth 

Might raise such virtue to her throne." 
He join'd their hands — Matilda's eye 

Downcast through tears of rapture beam'dj — 
But whence, oh, Albert! was the sigh 

That struggling with thy being seem'd 1 
The sigh was hush'd — th' incautious boy 

Resum'd again a lover's joy ; 
With more than equal warmth express'd 
The rapture kindling in his breast ; 

Clasp'd her soft hand, then at her feet, 
With graceful ardour bent the knee — 

" Behold thy slave ! his happiness complete — 
Heav'n gives him worlds, oh ! more than worlds in thee !" 

The voice of joy is heard in Norman's halls, 
And music echoes through his castle walls ; 
His festive vassals, on the flow'ry green, 
Lead up the dance, the circling groves between, 
e 5 



82 

Where mingling leaves and blossoms wave around, 
And fairy streamlets, murmuring, join the sound 
Of mirth and music, as they loudly float, 
Wak'ning on hill and dale the echo's mimic note. 
But who is she, that, brighter than the day, 

Moves with superior grace the dance along] — 
The loves and graces in her dark eyes play, 

Her breath is fragrance, and her voice is song; 
Though youth, and rank, and beauty too, are there, 

Dim are their beams beside Livonia's star — 
Where smiles Lord Norman's daughter, who seems fair? 

She, fairest of the fair, surpassing far ! 
Bright sparkled Albert's dark-blue eye, — 
Yet seem'd his bosom lab'ring with a sigh ; 

And while from a menial's hand he took 

A golden cup, his own convulsive shook; 
Yet, turning to his bride, with smiling air 

He bow'd, and to his lips the goblet rais'd — 

" This is to thee !" he cried a stranger fair 

His view that moment caught, as on his face she gaz'd. 

Amid the gay and festive band 

Her fairy form was seen to stand, . 

A wildness in her hasty glance 

That spoke the soul in mournful trance ; 

Pale, 'mid the giddy sons of mirth, 

She look'd not like a thing of earth ! 
The wildness in her azure eye 

Quench' d not its beauty-beaming lustre; 
And the quick throb, and frequent sigh, 
Heav'd her modest bosom high 

Round which her fair long tresses cluster, 






83 

While her polished cheek with ev'ry breath 

Assum'd the rose's glow, or lily hue of death. 
In her fair hand with anxious care 
A pale and wither'd rose she bare ; 
Which sometimes to her lip she press'd, 
Then hid it, smiling, in her breast — 
Ah ! me, that smile ! though still a nameless charm, 

Play'd round her lovely mouth and dimpled cheek, 
It faded in a look of wild alarm, 

And seem'd of madness more than joy to speak! 
She came, and stood at Albert's side, 
And gaz'd on him, and on his bride, — 

Her lovely hand across her forehead drew ; 

The parted curls display'd its snowy hue, 

And the soul- touching eye of softest blue. 

" Albert! they said I was betray 'd — 
Left and abandon'd for a wealthier maid ! 
But, oh, my love I I knew it could not be^ 
And they who told the story knew not thee ;-r- 
They did not know thy soul — thy faith sincere, 
And all that made thee to this heart so dear ! 

They watch'd my steps — they told me I was wild, 
And would not let me go my love to seek ; 

But I at length their watchfulness beguil'd, — 
And I am here — but, Albert, I am weak, 
And sick at heart, for I had far to rove — 
I could not find thee, Albert, in the grove 

Where last we rested, while the setting sun 

Ah, me ! I wander — lady, I have done — 

I will away" — she turn'd her to depart — 

" The rose he gave, is wither'd quite and gone ; 

And thou art wither'd too, poor broken heart !" 



84 

" Yet stay, one moment stay, dear injur'd maid ! 

My sick'ning soul is struggling to be free ; 
JLo ! the stern debt of gratitude is paid — 

Yon friendly cup restores me back to thee I — 
Matilda, hear! — from early youth we lov'd; 

On Glomin's banks, her shady groves among, 
My youthful heart love's tender passion prov'd, 

And fair Christina still inspir'd my song. 
For her I chac'd the lynx through forests brown, 

His glossy fur at her dear feet to lay ; 
Unfelt the danger, and my toil's best crown 

To meet Christina's smile at close of day! 
Where Ocean roar'd below, and storms above, 

Eager 'mid blackening rocks I careless sprung 
The wild-bird's nest to plunder for my love, 

But spar'd, at her request, the callow young. 
With her a Paradise the vale appear'd, 

W T hen summer shed her short-liv'd fervours there, 
And winters lengthen'd reign was more than cheered, 

With all on earth that's happy, good, or fair. 
Lord Norman's fost'ring friendship brought me here ; 

Thy smile, alas ! more fatal than thy frown, 

Rais'd me at once to honour and renown ; — 
Thou know'st the rest— and oh! thou hadst been dear, 
Had this poor blighted flow'ret ne'er been known ! 
But she was my betroth'd, and I was all her own. 
And think not, lady ! that ambition burning 

In Albert's bosom quench'd so pure a flame — 
Loaded with favours, hopeless of returning, 

I gave — oh ! more than gratitude could claim— 
My plighted love to agony and mourning, 

My spotless honour to eternal shame ! 



85 

But ah, farewell ! the debt is dearly paid — 

For thee may happier scenes unclouded rise — 

Oh ! where, my poor Christina ! hast thou stray'd 1 

Return, my first, best love ! and close these dying eyes !" 

" My love, my lord ! — oh, Heav'n ! — he faints ! he falls ! 
Ah ! stay thee yet, nor leave me here to pine — 
It is thy bride — 'tis thy Matilda calls ! 

Oh, fatal word! I am not, was not thine; — 
That all too noble heart was never, never mine !" 

The voice so pleasing to her ear, 
So long belov'd, so early dear, 
Struck on Christina's soul — she came, 
And fault'ring forth her lover's name, 
Sunk in his out-stretch'd arms, and there 
Breath'd her last sigh on the summer-air : 
Clos'd her blue eyes to the beams of day, 
And, like a with'ring flow'r, she droop'd and died away. 

" Oh ! linger yet, my only bride, 

Thy long-betroth'd is at thy side; 

Oh! close not yet thine eyes of blue, 
Till Albert's eyes shall sleep for ever ; 

For, oh ! this heart is freezing too, 
And we have met, and will not sever! 

Thus in a first, a last embrace 
Thy form I circle, and thy faded charms ; 

Thus kiss thy dear adored face, 
Nor death itself tear thee from my arms." — 
He press'd her cold cheek closer to his own, 
And flew to greet her in the worlcf unknown. 



88 

111 fated bride ! unbraid thy raven hair", 

Give it abroad upon the winds to flow; 
For ill such splendour suits with thy despair ; 

And tear those circling diamonds from thy brow : 
Where is thy bridegroom, — where thy lover now? 
Poor widow'd bride! if thou would'st weep 
Where Albert's bones for ever sleep, 
Go seek them at Christina's urn, 
And o'er thy rival's ashes mourn ; 
For there, in mournful silence laid, 
Thy plighted bridegroom, and his Norway maid 
In one low grave together rest. — 
Will the cold dews that fall around, 
Like tear-drops on the sacred ground, 
E'er quench the fever raging in thy breast? 
Or the chill breezes, as they blow, 
Cool thy parch'd lip and burning cheek? — ah, no!— 



THE FAIR CAPTIVE. 



Upon a wild and rugged coast, 
Where loud the ocean surges tost, 
A solitary watch-tow'r stood, 
And frown'd upon the restless flood, 



87 

In many a wild fantastic shape 
Rose the rude cliff and jutting cape; 
Behind, a lone, deep valley green, 
And woody mountains clos'd the scene. 

Seldom in that deep valley's green 
Was print of human footstep seen, 
And seldom were the echoes woke 
But the wild sea-bird's cry to mock. 

Save when the lawless pirate crew 
To this, their rude retreat, withdrew; 
Then Echo, from her inmost cell, 
Return'd the rev'llers mingled yell. 

No female footstep ever trod 

The solitary bleak abode ; 

Nor aught was heard of woman fair— » 

Save one — and she was captive there. 

There, day by day, she wept and sigh'd, 
And still the swelling billows ey'd ; 
And when fair Summer deck'd the vale, 
Her sad song floated on the gale.— 

" Oh! Heav'n, how irksome 'tis to view 
The summer-sky's delightful blue, 
From this dull prison, day by day; 
And waste my life in sighs away ! 



88 

How irksome too, to hear the wave 
The level beach so softly lave ; 
While my parch'd lips can scarce inhale 
Thy gentle J)reath, sweet western gale. 

Oh ! come again, sweet cooling breeze, 
On viewless wings across the seas ; 
Breathe softer than a lover's sigh, 
This prison's lofty window by. 

Oh, me ! how oft by fancy led, 
My native flow'ry fields I tread ; 
Then start from the dear soothing dream, 
Rous'd by the passing sea-bird's scream. 

Far distant from this rugged strand 
Spread thy fair plains, my native land ! 
But never more these eyes shall see 
That native land so dear to me ! 

Oh, fatal hour! oh, fatal clay ! 
That bore me from those plains away, 
A pirate's slave — a pirate's love — 
Oh, worse than slavery to prove ! 

Beneath Iberia's genial skies 

I open'd first these languid eyes ; 

And wealth was mine, and high degree' — 

Ah ! what avail'd they— am I free ] 



89 

'Mid orange groves, and citron bow'rs, 
How swiftly flew my happy hours ! 
What made those hours so swiftly move? 
'Twas Henry's smile ! 'twas Henry's love ! 

But Henry was no mighty lord ; 
His all — his honour and his sword- 
Sprung from a haughty, ancient line, 
A stern and cruel sire was mine. 

We fled — ah ! what could lovers do, 
Or what but ruin could ensue ? — 
A father's curse, a mother's wail, 
I heard in ev'ry passing gale ! 

We fled, to seek fair Albion's land, 
And left at night Laredo's strand ; 
The star-beams twinkled on the wave — 
Destin'd, alas! for Henry's grave! 

The stars were hid, — the storm came forth, 
Loud blust'ring from the angry North ; 
Driv'n far to sea, the shatter'd bark 
Rode the rude billows through the dark. 

And when the orient morn arose 
So bright — in mock'ry of our woes — 
O'er the calm'd billows azure sheen 
The pirate's blood-red flag was seen. 



m 

t cannot, cannot tell the rest-*- 
I saw the life-blood stain his vest— 
I saw him die — I shriek'd, I fell — 
Would then had toll'd my fim'ral knell ! 

But many a morn, to these sad eyes 
Black with despair, was yet to rise ; 
To this dark den of robbers borne, 
From hope, from life, from freedom torn. 

The pirate's love — the pirate's slave — 
Oh ! worse than torture and the grave ! — 
When, when will Death these eye-lids seal, 
When shall this bosom cease to feel ! 

But hush ! the western breeze is fled ; • 
The foamy billow rears its head, 
And fast athwart thelow'ring sky 
The gathering clouds in tumult fly. 

Oh ! Heav'n ! that now the tempest's pow'r 
Would shatter wide this hateful tow'r, 
And set me free from thraldom sore, 
Or crush me here to weep no more ! 

Hark ! far above, the thunder's crash — 
See through the gloom the lightning's flash — ■ 
The tow'r rocks wildly to the storm, 
And freedom comes in death's pale form V 






91 

The captive's voice was heard no more. 
The towVs huge fragments strew'd the &ore. 
And nought was seen where once it stood, 
But the rude cliff above the flood. 

And many a year has now gone by 
Since the rude watch-tow'r frown'd on high, 
Nor voy'ger's boat, nor pirate band, 
E'er tread the long-deserted strand. 

Yet when the seaman anchors there, 
Fresh water from the spring to bear j 
In the lone valley's gloomiest green 
A strange and shadowy form is seen. 

Sudden along the heaving tide. 
The passing spirit seems to glide — 
So ghastly pale — so dimly fair — 
Then mixes with the viewless air. 



GAVIN THE FALSE. 



* Again I feel my bosom glow 

With love, with rapture, and delight; 

His faith is prov'd, his love I know, 
Nor time can cool, nor absence blight. 



92 

1 hasten now, with trembling joVj 

To meet him by the river's side ; 
No fearful doubts my breast annoy, 

For I shall soon be Gavin's bride^ 

My parents smile upon us too, 

And love my Gavin as their child !" 

Thus youthful Rosa sung, and flew 
To meet him in the flow'ry wild. 

'Twas morning hour, the sunny beams 
Had scarcely sipp'd the dews away ; 

Bright were the fields, the woods, and streams, 
And loud the sweet lark's matin lay. 

Serenely bloom'd the landscape round, 
And rapture throbb'd in Rosa's heart, 

For there no vice had entrance found, 
But all was pure and void of art. 

She tripp'd along the verdant vale, 

And almost reach'd the destin'd grove, 

When, lo ! upon the whisp'ring gale 
Breath'd a soft voice— the voice of love. 

She stopp'd — for well she knew that voice — 
" Alas! to whom can Gavin speak? 

To meet me here was Gavin's choice" — 
And deeper blushes dy'd her cheek. 



03 

She saw him through the chequered shade- 
She mark'd the rapture in his eye — 

She saw a lovely stranger maid, 

That smil'd, and gave him sigh for sigh. 

She heard him all his vows repeat ; 

Quick throbb'd her heart — she heard no more, 
But swiftly turn'd her trembling feet, 

And sought the river's fatal shore. 

" Gavin !" she cried — he caught the word ; 

Echo returned the desp'rate cry- 
But, ah ! too late false Gavin heard, 

He only came to see her die. 

Stretch'd on the river's brink she lay ; 

An aged shepherd rais'd her head, 
And sadly shook his tresses grey, 

And sorrow'd o'er the dying maid. 

Her fading eye was dim with death, 
Her drenched ringlets loosely flow, 

And short and quick the parting breath 
UpheavM her bosom's virgin snow. 

He would have spoke — but conscious guilt 
And wild remorse his bosom wrung ; 

And more than death the traitor felt 
As o'er the injur'd maid he hung. 



94 

a False ! — yet belov'd — forgiv'n — adieu !"- 
Her quiv'ring lips no more could say ; 

To happier realms the spirit flew — 
To realms of everlasting day ! 

Poor Rosa ! in the grave was laid ; 

But frantic Gavin, far and wide, 
Long, long, a houseless maniac stray'd, 

Still raving on his murder'd bride. 

And she, whose base, detested fraud 
Had lur'd his erring heart astray, 

Bespis'd, deserted, and abhor'd, 
In friendless mis'ry pines away. 



THE VALLEY OF TOW * 



I N an isle of the North, where the keen ocean breeze 
Whistles shrilly and wild o'er the heath-cover'd hills, 

Where the rude cliffs are wash'd by the merciless seas, 
Where bleak are the valleys, and scanty the rills ; 



* A beautiful and romantic valley in Coningsburgh, Zetland; 
the property of A. Duncan, esq. 



95 

Yet, where sometimes ye mark, the bare mountains 
among, 

A green fertile vale spreading fair to the view ; 
Where the mountain stream rushes in beauty along, 

Like the murmuring burn through the valley of Tow. 

On the banks of this burn, when the moonshine was 
bright 

On the green fields of corn, and the cottages round, 
Poor William ! alone, in the silence of night, 

Mix'd his tears with the dew-drops that spangled the 
ground. 
He gaz'd on the mountains, the valley, the burn 

As it flow'd on to mix with the ocean's wave blue; 
And cried, in despair — " I shall never return 

To wander again through the valley of Tow ! 

Oh ! why did I look on the cottage with scorn 1 

Why glow'd this proud bosom for glory and fame? 
Why left I the isle where my grandsires were born, 

To toil for the splendour that waits on a name ? 
How blithely the lark call'd me up from my rest, 

How sweet too at night was the soft falling dew, 
When the sun had scarce sunk in the clouds of the 
West, 

But ting'd with his gold beams the mountains of Tow ! 

How dear are the days of the past to my soul, 

How sweet are the scenes of my childhood and youth ! 

Roll back, ye blest moments of innocence, roll — 
When the bosom was glowing with nature and truth ! 



06 

Awaken around me, ye shades of the dead, 

Dear guardians of infancy gladden my view ! — 

Alas ! in the cold grave, for ever is laid, 
All, all that was dear in the valley of Tow. 

And this is the path-way along the burn-side, 

Where I wander'd with Ellen, sweet flow'r of the vale ! 
Dear, innocent Ellen ! my long promis'd bride, 

How cold is thy dwelling ! thy beauty how pale! 
When the rising waves dash'd on the echoing shore, 

And over the surges the loud tempest blew, 
Didst thou listen with anguish and dread to the roar, 

And think upon William — far distant from Tow 2 

And when the white sail pass'd by Mousa's green isle, 

Didst thou hail, my blest Ellen ! thy sailor's return? 
Did thy lovely face beam with a tear and a smile, 

As pensive you wander'd alone by the burn? 
Yes, day after day disappointment you bore, 

For never again did the bark meet your view, 
Nor the fair southern gale wa^t your love to the shore, 

Till you faded and died in the valley of Tow. 

And I, my belov'd-one, would seek thy cold grave, 

To share it, and join thee again in the sky ; 
But honour forbids, that a son of the wave 

Should shrink like a coward when battle is nigh ! 
And battle is near, and to-morrow we go — 

Ye scenes of delight, an eternal adieu ! 
Soon, soon from this bosom the life-blood shall flow, 

And these dim eyes be clos'd — but far distant from Tow ! 



97 

The blood-tinctur'd sea-wave my pillow shall be, 
The wild bird shall shriek o'er its desolate prey, 

And my woes find a tomb in the depths of the sea- 
Far, far from thy grave, dearest Ellen ! away." 

The north wind was high, and the billow's rude swell, 
While he heard at a distance his messmates' halloo ; 

And there streamM in his last look a fatal farewell, 
As he left, with a sigh, the sweet valley of Tow. 



THE DEATH OF LEANDER. 



Leander in the bloom of youth 
Was deck'd with ev'ry grace, 

For honour, worth, and spotless truth, 
Were beaming in his face. 

But ye who all the soul would know, 
And search its inmost part — 

Say, did those matchless virtues glow 
As brightly in his heart ? 

'M$ flow'ry lawns, and gardens trim, 

rfis stately mansion stood ; 
Where many a fountain's sparkling brim 

Was fring'd with waving wood, 
r 



98 

And all that charms the ear and eye, 

From earth, or sea, or air — 
That art could frame, or wealth supply., 

To please the sense — was there. 

His hours in one continued round 

Of mirth and pleasure flew ; 
And ev'ry want and wish was crown'd— 

If want or wish he knew. 

No wand'ring beggar sought in vain 

His hospitable door, 
And injur'd virtue told its pain, 

To feel that pain no more. 

Still to his slightest promise true ; 

A friend sincere and kind ; 
A lover firm, and tender too, 

And just to all mankind — 

Accomplish'd, learned, great and wise, — - 

Was not Leander bless'd ? 
Oh ! yes, he was — to mortal eyes- — 

But pause, and hear the rest. 

Leander, though so highly rais'd 

Above the sons of earth, 
Nor bow'd, nor worshipp'd, thank'd, nor prais'd, 

From whence those gifts had birth. 



99 

Oh ! say, can such a creature be, 
Nor gratitude hath warm'd ? 

A soul from vice so seeming free, 
And yet so much deform'd ! 

Ah, me! I fear that many such 
The stage of life have trod ; 

Who seem to worship virtue much, 
But worship not their God. 

7 Tis heav'n's own ray that falls in vain 
Around their stubborn soul — 

So cheerless stand amid the main, 
The ice-rocks of the pole ! 

So glitter in the sunny light 
With many a frozen wreath — 

The surface all is dazzling bright, 
But all is cold beneath ! 

At length, while yet his pulse was high, 
And pleasure danc'd around, 

Disease, with poison'd dart, came by, 
And gave the fatal wound. 

Alas ! how chang'd the brilliant scene 

That late Leander view'd ! 
Forlorn he lies in racking pain, 

With anguish-drops bedew'd. 



200 

All ! tell me, what avails it now, 
That he was great and wise? — 

Can greatness smooth that ruffled brow, 
Or check those lab'ring sighs 1 

Can all the aid that man may give, 

The failing pulse restore; 
Or bid the wretched sinner live 

For one short moment more ! 

He would attempt — but all in vain — 

To lift his hopes on high ! 
Repentance weeps in fruitless pain, 

And judgment threatens nigh. 

Now conscience wakes the ling'ring smarts 

And bids delusion cease ; 
Remorse and terror rend his heart, 

And agonize his peace. 

The world, and all he trusted there, 

Is fading from his sight; 
And closing fast in dread despair, 

His eyes are dim with night. 

The stubborn knees, that would not bow 

In pray'r before his God, 
Are stiff, and cold as marble now s 

Beneath the silent sod. 



101 

Ah ! what avails it, that his form 

Was deck'd with ev'ry grace — 
That truth, and love, and friendship warm, 

Glow'd in his manly face 1 

Alas ! they glow'd not in his soul ; — 

But, as a fleetfng shade, 
Across his darken'd path they stole, 

And no impression made. 

Oh ! come, ye young and thoughtless ! come 

View where Leander lies — 
Pause o'er the wretched sinner's doom, 

And pausing, yet be wise ! 



AN ADDRESS TO ZETLAND. 



Ci The land of Cakes*" has oft been sung, 

In many a poet's strain ; 
But never might " the land of Fish" 

Such proud distinction gain. 

Then I will lift the voice of praise ; 

To thee my strains belong; — 
Thy misty hills, and humid vales, 

First woke my infant song. 

* A name frequently applied to Scotland 



102 

Oft wand'ring by thy sea-beat shore 

I woo'd the pensive Muse : 
Nor will the Genii of thy rocks 

This votive lay refuse. 

Long be thy banks, romantic Sound* ! 

Industry's happy seat ; 
And long thy fame remember'd be ; — 

First trod by princely feet ! 

May commerce oft with spreading sail, 

To Lerwick's coast repair ; 
And gentle peace, on halcyon plume, 

For ever linger there. 

And long the nymphs of Lerwick shine, 

Devoid of modish art; 
With beauty deck'd, and ev'ry charm 
That wins the gallant heart. 

And fertile prove your barren fields, 

Adorn'd with waving grain, 
Where nought was seen but noisome weeds, 

And dreary desert plain. 

And may that source of half your wealth, 
The ocean's finny race, 

* A beautiful spot, near the town of Lerwick ; the property of 
Mr. Nicholson, of Lochend. It was here, according to tradition, 
that some Norwegian prince, of high celebrity, formerly landed. 



103 

Reward the honest fisher's toil, 
And long your tables grace. 

And, oh ! ye Zetland lairds be kind, 
And shield th' industrious poor 

From hard oppression's iron rod, 
And tyranny of pow'r. 

Oh ! think how noble 'tis to smooth 

The couch of want and care ; 
To bid the honest tenant smile, 

And sweet contentment share. 

Oh ! think what fond and fervent zeal 

Shall sanctify your cause, 
When never forc'd by pining want 

To break your rigid laws. 

How sweet the meed of conscious worth, 

More dear than public fame ! 
How sweet the blessings that repose 

Upon a good man's name ! 

Then rule with mercy—so shall Heav'n 

Your fondest wishes speed ; 
And joy, and peace, and plenty reign 

From Scaw* to Sumburgheadf. 

* Scaw, in Urst, the most northern of the Zetland isles. 
t Sumburghead, the southernmost point of Zetland. 



104 

Oh ! Laxford, dear ! thy barren hills 

Fond mem'ry still must love ; 
To thee my wand'ring fancy turns, 

Where'er my footsteps rove. 

Oh ! scenes by happy childhood bless'd^ 

When grief was all unknown — 
But dearer now, and treasur'd more. 

Your joys for ever flown. 

'Twas there, oh, Scott ! thy presence cheer'd 

Thine hospitable hall ; 
'Twas there thou gav'st with friendly smile 

A welcome unto all. 

Beneath thy roof each wand'rer found 

A refuge from the storm ; 
And frequent hast thou sheltered there 

The orphan's trembling form. 

Now in the cold and silent tomb 

Thy mould'ring dust is laid, 
And yet no marble stone is rear'd 

To point thy lowly bed. 

But, oh ! within the grateful breast 

Thy mem'ry long shall dwell ; 
Nor ask of art its feeble aid, 

Thy hon©ur'd name to tell. 



105 

And thou whom sorrow's chilling breath 

Destroy'd in beauty's bloom, 
How oft shall friendship's sacred tear 

Bedew thy early tomb ! 

Oh, Isabella ! ever dear, 

How oft has fancy rov'd 
With thee by Laxford's moonlight stream, 

And all the haunts we lov'd ! 

With thee I never more shall rove 
By Laxford's bounding wave — 

Thy spirit sought its kindred skies, 
Thy form its peaceful grave. 

When o'er thy bed a husband hung, 

And dropt the fruitless tear ; 
When thy lov'd infant's feeble voice 

Rung on thy dying ear ; 

With all the eloquence of sighs, 
And all the warmth of pray'r, 

The kneeling friends around thy bed 
Besought of Heav'n to spare. — 

'Twas vain — thy blameless course was run, 
The blow of death was giv'n ; 

And angels hover'd o'er thy head, 
To waft thy soul to heav'n. 

F5 



106 

Adieu to thee, and all the friends 

That happy childhood knew ;— 
By absence some, yet more by death, 

Snatch'd sudden from my view ! 

And Laxford's winding stream, adieu ! 

Adieu, thy sea-beach wild, 
Where oft I've rov'd with careless feet, 

Untutor'd nature's child ! 

I dream'd not that a fairer spot 

On earth's broad bosom lay ; 
Nor ever wish'd my wand'ring feet 

Beyond its bounds to stray. 

And when I read of fairer fields 

Beyond the northern main; 
And tow'ring trees, whose leafy arms 

Spread o'er the flow'ry plain ; 

Of rivers, through the verdant vale 

Meandering smooth and clear; 
Or where cascades their torrents dash 

O'er precipices drear : 

I read — and fancy cloth'd thy steps 

With darkling groves of pine ; 
Bright bloom'd thy flow'rs, smooth flow'd thy streams, 
And ev'ry charm was thine. 



107 

Soft on the weedy sea-beach stole 
The wave with murmur low ; 

And o'er the undulating tide 
Serener zephyrs blow. 

And there the moon, in radiance pale, 

Her mildest lustre threw ; 
Silv'ring the rocks of Tuinna-taing, 

And Ocean's bosom blue. 

The fields of Hammerslain were gay 
With flow'rs of simple dye ; 

And primrose there and daisy bloom'd 
Beneath a brighter sky. 

Oh, Laxford ! once my happy home, 

Farewell thy rocky shore ! 
The wand'rer that has fled from thee 

Returns, alas ! no more. 

Oh ! Hammerslain's romantic fields, 

Take, take my last farewell ! — 

Another now shall rove your banks, 

- And in Scott's-Hall shall dwell ; 

Another now shall nurse the flow'rs 
I rear'd with anxious care ; 

Another range the sandy beach, 
And eull the sea-shells there. 



108 

Another, by the hum reclin'd, 
O'er some sad tale shall weep ; 

Or list'ning to its murm'ring voice. 
Be softly lull'd to sleep. 

Another now by Severspool 

At purple dawn shall stray, 
And on the mossy ward-hill* mark 

The sportive lambkins play. 

Farewell, ye scenes of dear delight, 

A long, a last adieu ! 
For never more your distant charms 

These aching eyes shall view. 

And, Laxford ! thou my once lov'd home, 

A long farewell to thee — 
The blissful hour of sweet return 

Shall never smile on me ! 

Yet mem'ry oft with pious tear, 

As changing seasons roll, 
Shall consecrate thy parted joys, 

And bind thee to my soul. 



* Many of the high hills in Zetland, upon which are yet to be 
seen the ruins of ancient watch towers, are thus denominated by 
the inhabitants. 



109 



ADDRESS TO PLEASURE, 



I KNOW thee not, oh, nymph so fair! 
With sparkling eyes and golden hair ; 
Thy skin more white than winter snows, 
Thy blushes brighter than the rose ; 
And breath more fragrant than the breeze 
That gently sighs on summer-trees ; 
The blue of midnight's vaulted skies 
Not equals thine expressive eyes, 
Whose brilliant glance is like the star 
That trembles through the clouds afar; 
Thy airy form more graceful seems 
Than willow bending o'er the streams ; 
And thou art swifter than the roe 
On breezy mountain's craggy brow. 

Oh ! nymph so fair, and heav'nly bright ! 
Thou art a stranger to my sight; 
Since happy childhood's early day 
A stranger to my weary way I 
How lightly flew those joyous hours, 
That saw me 'tend my op'ning flow'rs ; 
The tulip gay, the lily white, 
Then gave my simple soul delight; 
And I could watch, with glad surprise, 
The moss-rose' lovely tints arise; 
Sweet-william op'ning to the ray, 
And closing with the closing day. 



110 

Too soon those happy moments fled, 
And ev'ry blissful scene was dead ; 
Creation's bloom did but annoy, 
And sighs and tears were all my joy, 
And solitude the only charm 
That could this pensive bosom warm. 
Oft in the deep sequester'd shade 
I woo'd the melancholy maid ; 
And when pale Cynthia rode the sky, 
Gaz'd on her beams, and almost wish'd to die. 

But thou, with Hope, art now return'd ; 
Welcome, long-lost, and deeply mourn'd ! 
With joy thy beauteous face I see, 
For, ah ! thy smiles are bent on me ; 
Forsake me not, sweet nymph ! again, 
Nor leave my soul the slave of pain : 
And thou, whose sister-form is nigh, 
Enchanting Hope, with eagle-eye ! 
Withdraw no more thy soothing dreams, 
Nor hide again the golden beams 
That open now with welcome light, 
Like morning on the skirts of night ! 
But stay to gild my future years, 
And wipe at last these falling tears. 



Ill 



LUBIN TO SYLVIA. 



Alas ! that beauty, like the rose, 
Should live but for a summer's day; 

And like that fairest flow'r disclose 
A blossom only to decay ! 

When time shall dim that sparkling eye, 
And wrinkle Sylvia's brow so fair, 

And bid those blooming blushes die, 
And silver o'er that auburn hair; 

When ev'ry charm you boast shall fade 
By cruel fate's severe decree ; 

What then remains, my lovely maid, 
Ah, Sylvia ! what remains for me ? 

When that fair form shall cease to charm, 
And ev'ry beauty shall depart ; 

What then the lover's breast shall warm- 
On ! what shall rivet Lubin's heart ? 

Turn from thy treach'rous glass awhile ; 

Thy soul's neglected culture see ! 
Let that with virtue's radiance smile, 

And Lubin only lives for thee. 



112 

For looks it well in wedded wife 

To laugh, to flirt, to dress, and stare 1 

I want, dear maid, a friend for life, 
To crown its joy, and soothe its care. 

The lover's eye perchance they bless,— 
But when the gordian knot is tied, 

Farewell to folly, glare, and dress ; 
Adieu to vanity and pride ! 

Far other scenes demand thy care ; 

Let these alone thy thoughts employ ; 
Then, e'en in age, I'll think thee fair, 

And in thee find perpetual joy. 



ADDRESS TO THE WINDS. 



Softly, ye wildly-wand'ring gales! 

Spare in your rage the leafless tree ; 
Breathe not your fury o'er the vales, 

Nor heave the billows of the sea. 

All nature mourns your tyrant reign ; 

Stripped are the honours of the grove 
And tempests through the aerial plain, 

Borne on your viewless pinions rove. 



113 

Restrain, oh, winds ! your blust'ring force ; 

. Ye tempests stop your mad career, 
Nor strew each gallant sailor's corse 
Untimely on a wat'ry bier. 

Spare, oh, ye winds ! the widow's moan, 
Nor wake the tear in beauty's eye; 

But waft our warriors safely home, 
In love and friendship's arms to die. 

For, toss'd upon the welt'ring wave, 

Far from each friend, and far from home, 

No stone can mark the hero's grave, 
No tear bedew the lover's tomb. 

Yet, gallant spirits ! shall each name 
Be dear to ev'ry British heart; 

E'en when we triumph in your fame, 
The sigh shall rise— the tear shall start. 

Illustrious, to the end of time, 

Each dauntless hero's name shall be, 

Who fell in manhood's hardy prime — 
Who fought — who bled — for liberty ! 

Speed on, oh time ! the happy day 
That lays at last oppression low; 

Then peace her olive shall display, 
And patriot-blood no more shall flow. 



114 

How sweet — how soothing is the thought ! 

When battle's stormy rage is o'er, 
That peace again, though dearly bought, 

Shall smile upon our native shore. 

Then cheerful o'er our cliffs we'll rove, 
And watch the peaceful bark glide by; 

And safely through her orange grove 
Again th' Iberian fair shall hie. 

Exulting shouts the heav'ns shall rend, 
When war's detested flag is furl'd ; 

And trade shall flourish — wealth extend, 
And commerce navigate the world. 



TO MARY. 



They, treach'rous, tell thee love is sweet, 
And yet my Mary's cheek is wet 

With many a pearly tear : 
Ah ! tell me then, my lovely maid ! 
From whence that liquid wand'rer stray'd* 

And whence those sighs I hear] 



115 

Can love, so gentle and so fair, 
Put on the semblance thus of care, 

And cloud thy youthful days ? 
Say, can he bid thy breast assume 
The suit of woe, the pensive gloom, 

That only grief should raise 1 

Alas ! thy bosom's heaving swell, 
The tears that from thine eye-lids fell, 

Relate a mournful tale : 
The rose of beauty is decay'd, 
And on thy cheek, sweet lovely maid I 

Now reigns the lily pale. 

Go, treach'rous love — I bid thee go— 
Thou art the source of many a woe, 

And short thy boasted joy ; 
Thy trembling sighs, thy streaming tears, 
Thy anxious hopes, and jealous fears, 

My Mary's peace destroy. 

I come in friendship's purest guise, 

To chace those tear-drops from her eyes, 

And hush those sighs of woe: 
Oh, Love ! restore my Mary's peace, 
And let thy busy tumult cease, 

Or wonted joy bestow. 



116 
TO THE EVENING STAR. 1803. 



Bright traveler of yon blue expanse, 
Throwing through clouds thy silv'ry glance, 

The dewy ev'ning to adorn ; 
Say, on what shore shall I appear, 
When thou, as wheels the rolling year, 

Shalt usher in the morn ? 

Still must these barren plains and hills, 
These rugged rocks, and scanty rills, 

My narrow prospects bound ? 
Must I, where nature's bounteous hand 
Dresses in smiles the favour' d land, 

Be never, never found 1 

Still on these plains, where scant'ly spread, 
The modest daisy lifts its head, 

Or lurks amid the*broom; 
Still with pall'd eye behold again, 
Thin scatter'd on the stony plain, 

The primrose scarcely bloom ? 

Oft fancy wanders many a mile, 

To scenes where nature loves to smile, 

And scatters charms around ; 
Where rocky mounts on mounts arise, 
Whose tow'ring summits kiss the skies, 

With leafy forests crown'd ; 






117 

Or where the dreadful cat'ract roars, 

Or where through meads of honied flow'rs 

Soft murm'ring rivers glide ; 
Or where the lake expands to view, 
Reflecting on its bosom blue, 

The mountain's woody side. 

But, ah ! this ocean's liquid round 
My dreary prospect still must bound ; 

And fancy dreams in vain 
Of distant shores, that only shine 
For other, happier, eyes than mine, 

Beyond the stormy main. 



TO JESSY OF YELL, 



He av'nly angels! hover round thee, 
Guard thy innocence, sweet maid ! 

Virtue's radiant train surround thee, 
In celestial robes array'd ! 

On thy cheek of youthful beauty, 
Long may health's fair roses bloom ; 

Long may filial love and duty, 
Bind thee to thy humble home. 



118 

May thy swain prove fond and faithful, 
May your loves together bloom ; 

But if false, may justice wrathful 
Drive th' inconstant to his doom. 

Heav'nly angels ! hover round thee, 
Guard thy innocence, sweet maid ! 

Oh ! may falsehood never wound thee, 
Never grief thy breast invade. 

But if Jessy find that treasure — 
Him whose heart is fond and true — 

Yours be ev'ry earthly pleasure, 
Ever smiling, ever new ! 

Go, and dwell, each bliss enjoying, 
In thy long-lov'd native isle ; 

Purest raptures never cloying — 
On your blissful union smile ! 

Then no cares, no woes gigantic, 
E'er shall wander where you dwell, 

On the sea-beat shore romantic, 
In thy native isle ©f Yell. 



119 
TO CHARLOTTE. 



I took thee, faithless ! to my breast ; 
And as a sweet and welcome guest 
I lodged thee in my inmost heart, 
And held thee as its dearest part. 

But hence, thou fickle girl, away ! 
No more that faithful heart betray ; 
Go, find a bosom like thy own— 
A haughty mind, a heart of stone. 

For, ah ! to banish my repose, 
Thy winning friendship sweetly rose, 
With gentle looks, and manners free, 
That won my purest love to thee. 

But, Charlotte ! since I'm once deceiv'd, 
Since friendship feign'd this heart has griey'd, 
I scorn thy falsehood to deplore, — 
Proud girl ! HI never love thee more. 

Yet think not that without a tear 

I banish'd all my love sincere , 

Or thought that thou wert false to me — 

But — this is my last sigh for thee. 



120 
TO MISS CLEMENTINA HOUSTON, 

ON HER LEAVING SCHOOL. 



From Scotia's wild romantic fields 
A blooming garland let me bring, 

Each flow'r that vale or mountain yields, 
Or blossoms on the breast of spring. 

And, Clementina! round thy brow 
The blooming garland let me twine ; 

It cannot, envy must allow, 

Deck a more placid brow than thine, 

Yet, should I praise thy lovely mien, 
Or tell thee that thy face was fair, 

Thou'dst view my verse with proud disdain, 
Nor think my friendship worth thy care. 

Long may'st thou bloom in youth and health, 
Thy friends sincere, thy lover true ; 

And long thy path be strew'd with wealth, 
For then the poor are blessed too ! 

In that dear home thy smile shall cheer, 

Content and happiness be thine ; 
No sorrow wake thy gushing tear, 

Nor bid thy gentle heart repine. 



121 

No dark disease with pois'nous breath 
Infect for thee the liquid air; 

And distant far the hour of death, 
Yet peaceful as thy midnight pray'r I 

The friendship which I felt for thee, 
Thy sorrowing tears did first bedew ; 

And when they sympathised with me, 
The infant bud took root and grew. 

Oh! never may it be our doom 
To see that op'ning flow'r decay, 

But fresher, lovelier, may it bloom, 
As year on year shall roll away. 

And though by fate's severe decree 
Apart we many a mile should stray, 

My faithful heart shall cherish thee, 
And love thee still, though far away. 



TO A WEALTHY MAN. 



Go, man of wealth ! and seek the shade 
Where Sickness' pining form is laid ; 
Where honest worth neglected lies, 
And wasted sorrow droops and dies. 

G 



122 

Go, raise the mourner's drooping head, 
And round his dwelling comfort shed ; 
Go, hush pale mis'ry's doleful cry, 
Assuage the tear, and hush the sigh. 

Go, bring yon weary wand'rer here, 
Where peace and plenty crown the year; 
Go, bid his woes and wanderings cease, 
And close his aged eyes in peace. 

Go, soothe the pang you widow feels, 
That o'er her babe despairing kneels ; 
Say, that her children thou'lt protect, 
Nor e'en the mother's woes neglect. 

Go, tell yon trembling orphan pale, 
At ev'ry door that sobs her tale, 
Thy wealth shall yield a parent's home, 
Nor future wants compel to roam. 

Go, search the prison's noisome cell, 
Where guilt, disease, and anguish dwell ; 
Where suff 'ring innocence complains, 
And man, thy fellow, walks in chains ! 

There set the pining debtor free, 
And blessings shall be pour'd on thee ; 
Relieve each want, console each care, 
And blunt the sorrows of despair. 



123 

So may thy bosom ne'er repine, 
So may sweet peace be ever thine ; 
Unnumber'd joys thy life attend, 
Virtue thy guide, and God thy friend ! 

So, long and happy may'st thou live, 
With all the bliss that life can give ; 
And die a death devoid of fear, 
And leave a name to thousands dear ! 

TO MISS B. OGILVY; ZETLAND. 



Dost thou remember, gentle maid, 

The hours that we have spent together; 

When by the Watchwell hill we stray'd, 
Regardless of the frowning weather ] 

Hast thou forgot each artless prank, 

When friendship's flow'ry fetters bound us 

When on the Knabb's projecting bank 
The misty morning oft has found us 1 

Or when the summer-sun glow'd high, 
And winds and waves were seen in motion, 

To Twagoe's pebbled shore we'd hie, 

And lave, like sea-nymphs, in the ocean? 



124 

Or, when our school-day task was o'er, 

As through the garden's sweets we'd ramble, 

The butterfly, from flow'r to flow'r, 
Pursue with many a sportive gambol] 

Oh ! these are scenes of infancy 

Which mem'ry ever loves to treasure; 

The happy hours of thoughtless glee, 
Of short-liv'd pain, and purest pleasure : 

The hours when mirth's tumultuous sway 
Dries up the new-fall'n tears of sorrow ; 

Enjoys the pleasures of to-day, 

Nor dreads to meet the coming morrow. 

As farther on life's rugged way, 

With anxious footstep quickly pressing, 

The more from childhood's haunts we stray, 
The dearer seems each faded blessing. 

Say, if, untainted still, thy mind 

Each gentle virtue makes its dwelling ; 

And if thy heart, still true and kind, 
With sympathy's warm throb is swelling 1 

When sorrow's mournful tale is told, 

Are tear-drops from thine eye-lids stealing ; 

Or has thine heart, grown hard and cold, 
Tum'd callous to each tender feeling | 



125 

But, ah ! my friend, forgive the fear 

Which thus in friendship's warmth arises ; 

For yet, as in each earlier year, 

My heart that friendship fondly prizes. 

The school-boy, from its verdant tree 
The op'ning rose-bud rudely sweeping, 

Its guardian thorn soon checks his glee, 
And leaves the thoughtless urchin weeping ; 

And smarting from the recent pain, 

Though near its fragrant sweets he'll linger, 

He dreads to pluck it, lest again 

The jealous thorn should wound his finger. 

Thus when the heart is wrung with pain 
By faithless friends, we're ever dreading 

To trust to friendship, lest again 
It leaves the wounded bosom bleeding. 

But our's was friendship's purest flame, 
Nor time its flow'ry bands shall sever ; 

Oh ! let me think thee still the same, 
Oh ! let me love and trust thee ever ! 



***+*^r 



120 



TO ELIZA MATILDA. 



Adieu to the scenes where the fairies have rov'd, 

Where the narrow burn rush'd down the moss-cover'd 
hill; 
Adieu to the haunts where so lately we lov'd 

By twilight, or moonlight, to wander at will ! 
Matilda ! those pleasures for ever have fled, 

No time shall restore them again to our sight ; 
No more on the banks of the smooth-flowing rill 
We shall sit, while the ev'ning around us is still, 

And gaze on her planet so bright. 

On the lap of affection indulgently laid, 

And nurs'd on the bosom of love, 
We knew not, we thought not, how soon they might fade, 

Or how far from our haunts they would rove ; 
For like dreams of romance that will gladden the soul, 

Or like some soothing vision of rapture and bliss, 
Around us awhile the enchantment was wove, 
Nor dream'd we, Matilda ! how soon we might prove 

All the sorrows of care and distress. 

Oh ! how blest and how happy, unmindful of wealth, 
The world, and its woes, and its pleasures forgot, 

We could dwell, the meek children of virtue and health, 
Contentment our fortune, our dwelling — a cot! 



127 

Again, my Matilda! how pleas'd would we stray 

By the moss-cover'd mountain, or smooth-flowing rill ; 
Where, bless'd with each other, we'd look up to heav'n, 
Our wishes confin'd to the lot that was giv'n, 
And the sphere we were destin'd to fill. 

But, alas ! how I wander, — wild Fancy, away ! 

Why picture a scene that's so bright and so fair ] 
Why tell me we ever again shall be gay, 

Poor victims of sorrow, and daughters of care ! 
Adieu, my Matilda ! to visions like these, 

That mock the sad heart, and can only annoy ;-— 
Let us dwell on the hope, with a rapture sincere, 
That we soon shall be freed from the wretchedness here, 

And mount to the regions of joy ! 



TO MISS SOPHIA HEADLE. 



Say, dear Sophia ! gentle friend, 
Wilt thou to Orkney's sea-beat strand 

Again thy wand'ring footsteps bend, 
And leave fair England's happy land ? 

When o'er the murm'ring billows borne, 
As whisp'ring breezes waft you there, 

Wilt thou with fond remembrance turn 
To her, that did thy pillow share ? 



128 

When summer clothes each hill and dell 
Of Ronaldsha, with verdant sweets ; 

And Echo, from her sacred cell, 
The murmurs of the wave repeats ; 

As through our favourite haunts you stray, 
Will mem'ry waken in thy mind, 

And fancy by thy side pourtray, 

The friend whom thou hast left behind \ 

And -when the merry Lammas Fair 
Shall bid each country belle and beau 

To Kirkwall's crowded street repair, 
Their wond'rous finery to show ; 

There, while the lively dance you join, 
Or list to music's melting strain — 

Say, will one passing thought be mine 
Amid the gay and jocund train? 

How oft, when wand'ring by the shore 
To catch the gentle ocean-breeze, 

In many a sigh my soul I pour 

To thee, across the murmuring seas ! 

I think upon thy tender cares, 

Sophia, with a tearful smile ; 
Pleasure aud pain alternate shares 

The feelings of my breast the while. 



129 

'Twas thine, my sorrowing soul to soothe, 
When rack'd and torn by many a grief, 

My rugged, slipp'ry path to smooth, 
And give my swelling heart relief. 

Farewell, my friend ! may peace be thine, 
Content, and health, and love, and joy; 

And never may a grief like mine, 
Dear girl ! thy bosom's peace alloy! 



TO ELIZA L. G. SUTHERLAND. 1810. 



The sky is blue, the fields are gay, 
And calm the bosom of the deep ; 

Then wilt thou come with me, and stray 
By Tomnahurich's haunted steep 1 

When gain'd the steep ascent we'll pause, 
And rest us on the mossy ground, 

While fancy's ready pencil draws 
The little fairies dancing round. 

Though high the scorching sun may glow, 
And steep and weary is the way, 

The lovely scenes that spread below 
Shall all our labour well repay. 

G 5 



130 

See, at our feet, how soft and slow 

Fair Nessa rolls her silver stream- 
There, deep and clear, how smooth the flow 
There rippling in the sunny beam! 

There the green isle, where eve and morn 
The mavis swells his warbling throat; 

And perch'd upon the lowly thorn, 
The linnet tunes the thrilling note. 

Its little grove, a cluster'd group, 
That smiles in ev'ry varied green. 

As low the pendant branches droop, 
Reflected in the wat'ry sheen. 

The busy manufacturer see 

Rears on its banks his useful dome ; 

Keeps many a hand from mischief free, 
And gilds with joy each humble home. 

And Charity has rear'd yon pile, 
That stands upon the level plain, 

Where tender cares the hours beguile 
Of those that suffer tort'ring pain. 

Mild Pity by their couch doth stand, 
And fever's burning pangs allay, 

Or gives the draught with ready hand, 
That soothes their agonies away. 



131 

And there the town of Inverness, 
Where scenes of busy life prevail — 

And the fair damsel's airy dress 

Scarce shields her from the passing gale. 

Among our Highland lasses sweet, 

There are, that like their dames of old, 

With dauntless courage bravely meet 
Our Northern climate's piercing cold. 

Yet through these streets I oft have seen 
Some mild and tender beauty stray, 

Have mark'd the sweetly modest mien, 
And cheek that blush'd like dawning day. 

Some in our ancient tartan clad, 
The fleece their native hills supply, 

" Blooming celestial rosy-red," 
The winter's frost and storm defy. 

Superior far to robes of gold, 

That come from India's gaudy looms; — 
Wrapp'd in its warm and graceful fold, 

Health smiles secure, and beauty blooms. 

But, see ! what closer wins the eye — 
Thy happy home, in yonder street; 

Where oft with eager haste I fly, 

Thee, and my long-lov'd friends, to greet! 



132 

See, there the Kessek ferry lies, 

Its murmuring billows hush'd to restj 

And see Morena's steep arise, 
Majestic, from its placid breast. 

There, as along their native hills, 
The wild Morena's snowy pride 

Are straggling o'er the verdant fields, 
Or nibbling on the mountain's side. 

And there Fort-Rose is just in sight, 
Where Learning still delights to dwell — 

Where Mitchell Scott, that wond'rous wight, 
Was bred, as ancient stories tell. 

And there, as if by magic plac'd, 
Upon the ocean's murm'ring surge, 

With many a rounded bastion fac'd, 
Appear the ramparts of Fort-George. 

Culloden, Stewart, Darcus too, 

Crargphadrick, by the Muse renown'd, 

And many an object worth thy view, 
Adorns the varied landscape round. 

Then come, my friend, and arm in arm 

The fairy-hill together climb ; 
Below, the spreading vale shall charm — 

Above, the mountain's height sublime. 



133 

Then come, my friend, oh! come away; 

Soon will the summer day be gone — 
It fades in ev'ning-shadows grey, 

And dreary night comes hastening on. 

So must the sunny morn of youth, 
In feeble age lose all its bloom, — 

Then follows dark — oh, mournful truth, 
A night of silence in the tomb ! 



TO LADY HAMLEY; BODMIN, CORNWALL, 



Ah ! wherefore is this starting tear? 

Back, lucid wand'rer ! back again; — 
When love, and joy, and hope are near 

This grief is idle, selfish, vain. 

Say, is it that my friend is bless'd 
In all that faithful love bestows, 

That sighs of sorrow swell my breast, 
And the big tear unbidden flows? 

Ah ! no, — but I have cause to grieve; 

A dear, and early valued friend, 
Too soon her native isle must leave, 

Far, far from hence her way to bend. 



134 

But I will dash the tear away, 

And tune ray harp to strains of joy ; 

Care must not cloud this happy day, 
Nor selfish grief thy bliss annoy. 

Oh ! may my pray'rs to Heav'n ascend, 
And bring life's choicest treasures down 

On thee and thine, my early friend ! 
And all your days with pleasure crown. 

And in your Hamley's happy home 
May love, and peace, and pleasure dwell; 

There may the social virtues come, 
And ev'ry lurking ill repel. 

For sure I am, thy choice must be, 
My friend, the worthiest and the best ! 

Or he had ne'er been lov'd by thee, 
Had ne'er thy feeling heart possessed. 

And as the brightest gift of God, 
He'll cherish thee with tend'rest love, 

Make easy all life's thorny road, 

And grief's complaining pangs remove. 

You go — again the tear-drops glide, 
And sighs my lab'ring bosom swell ; 

Oh! how shall I my sorrows hide! 
Or how pronounce the word — farewell ! 



135 

Yet, fare ye well ! — for part we must — 
Eternal joy your bosoms share ! 

Oh ! may the Muse not vainly trust 
That Heav'n propituous hears the pray'r ! 



TO MRS. GRANT, OF DUTHELL. 

ON READING HER " INTELLECTUAL EDUCATION." 



-s-**s-s-s-*-- s». 



The pleasing task, " to rear the tender thought," 

And fix the gen'rous purpose in the soul, 
Has long been your's, and gradual time has taught 

The truth and blessings of your mild controul. 
From the sweet baby smiling through its tears, 

To frolic childhood, laughing, frank and free, 
Each varying shape that dawning reason wears 

Has long been known, respected friend ! to thee. 
To watch the mind's young blossoms, and to guard 

The lovely plants from ev'ry noxious blight, 
Hath been your care, and now your rich reward 

To see them bloom around in ev'ry virtue bright ! 

Nor pain, nor grief your ardour could subdue, 

Though deadliest pangs your tortur'd bosom wrung, 

And bitter drops of anguish would bedew 
The lovely faded form o'er which you hung. 



136 

Oh ! I have seen you with a saint-like smile, 

Though sickly sorrow wore your life away, 
With cheering praise your pupils' tasks beguile, 

And charm each lurking evil fear away : 
And many a heart with mine will now attest, 

How priz'd your ceaseless care at such a time; 
When she, the loveliest, dearest, and the best, 

Was snatch'd away by Death/ in beauty's early prime! 

Oh, most respected ! and, oh, best belov'd ! 

What arm'd your soul to bear such heavy grief? — 
? Twas pious faith, and meek religion, prov'd 

Your certain solace, and your sure relief: 
Nor your's alone — you spread the blessing round, 

And lifted up our youthful hearts to heav'n ; 
And in your bright example still we found 

How good and lovely ev'ry precept giv'n ! 
And in your moral page shall others find 

Whate'er improves or dignifies the soul; 
Shall learn to form and mould the infant mind, 

And free the lovely babe from terror's false controiil. 

The youthful mother with delight shall read, 

And make each useful maxim there her own ; 
While powerful nature in her breast shall plead, 

To 'tend herself the precious charge alone : 
No hireling's breast her baby's cheek shall press, 

Her children's plaint no other voice shall stilly 
No other soothe their infantine distress, 

Or check, with tend'rest care, the froward will. 



137 

And oh! for this, for all her anxious days, 

And sleepless nights, her rich reward shall be, 

To see them walk in wisdom's pleasant ways, 
When from her guardian hand in riper age set free. 

The brightest patterns then of female worth 

Her lov'd and lovely daughters shall appear ; 
Her sons add lustre to the noblest birth, 

For ev'ry manly grace and virtue dear. 
Whatever path ordain'd by fate to tread, 

Honour shall be the guardian of their way — 
Virtue shall deck the wisdom of the head, 

And reason calm the passion's madd'ning play. 
Like the sweet rose, the beauteous queen of flow'rs, 

Bright shall they bloom in fairest garb array'd, 
And when expir'd on earth their measur'd hours, 

Shall leave a name behind whose lustre cannot fade, 



ADDRESS TO THE BRITISH NAVY. 1813, 



Ye gallant souls! that nobly brave, 

Still guard Britannia's happy shore, 
Or vent'rous plough the trackless wave 

From Arctic to Antarctic's roar — 
How shall a simple Northern lyre 

Attempt such proud and lofty strain, 
As dares to sing your dauntless fire 

And triumphs on the subject main? 



138 

So bold a theme might well demand 

Oh, wond'rous Scott ! thy matchless hand, 

The humbled pow'rs of Europe own 

Your sov'reign empire on the sea; 
'Tis there you rear Britannia's throne, 

And stamp her 'mong the nations free. 
The roaring deep, the 'whelming storm, 

Ne'er yet could British courage quell ; 
For still ye worshipp'd Freedom's form, 

And conquer'd in her cause, or fell ; 
And Ocean's waters, as they roll, 
Tell of your fame from pole to pole. 

And turn our view to elder time, 

When Britain's glory Alfred plann'd ; 
And rear'd a bulwark thus sublime, 

To centinel her happy land : — 
Oh, mighty warrior! mighty king! 

How bright on gothic darkness rose 
Thy soaring genkis' dazzling wing, 

And shook down ruin on thy foes — 
Ordain'd to wield, oh, best of men ! 
The sword, the sceptre, and the pen. 

Jn later years, Iberia's pow'r 

In vain its boasted strength display'd ; 

She fled from Britain's guarded shore, 
All vanquished, ruin'd, and dismay'd : 

Then pressing on th' astonish' d view, 
What scenes of naval glories glide ! 



139 

Old Ocean, on his bosom blue, 

Bears your proud fleets with conscious pride, 
And speeds, triumphantly unfurl'd, 
Britannia's ensign round the world. 

Still may that ensign, proudly spread, 

Wave glorious on the ocean-breeze ; 
Humble our foes, protect our trade, 

And hold our empire on the seas : 
Still conquerors on the subject deep, 

May distant nations own your claim — ■ 
And when in glory's arms you sleep, 

Ye die not — deathless is your fame ! 
How bright the naval hero's doom — 
A grateful nation mourning o'er his tomb ! 

Nor deem that one unwept can fall, 

For ever to your country dear ! 
She honours, and she mourns you all, 

And gems your laurels with a tear. 
And dearer far than public praise, 

For you, at nature's sacred shrine 
Her tears maternal anguish pays, 

And friendship mourns, and love divine.— 
In life renown'd, in mem'ry blest, 
Sweet is the patriot's place of rest ! 

For you the mother hourly prays, 

And bends to Heav'n the pious knee; 

For you what anxious thousands gaze, 
Trembling, upon the changeful sea. 



140 

For you, from beauty's downcast eye, 
The pearly drop is seen to stray ; 

And the fair bosom's secret sigh 
Mourns but the sailor far away — 

Oh ! that propitious Heav'n may spare, 

And grant ye to a nation's pray'r! 

And when the din of war is o'er, 

And glory's bright career is run, 
Return, ye warriors! to that shore 

From whence your brilliant course begun 
Whether to England's Druid groves, 

Or Caledonia's mountain-rills, 
Or where the ancient Briton roves 

By Cambria's rude gigantic hills : 
Or where the brave Hibernian strays — 
Where Shannon's sparkling water plays! 

Return — the sweets of peace to find, 

To bask in love and friendship's smile, 
The laurel round your brows to bind, 

To rest from danger and from toil; 
Again inhale the mountain breeze, 

And rear, upon your native land, 
Those oaks, that yet upon the seas 

Your children's children shall command; 
For distant ages, yet to time unknown, 
Britannia's empire on the deep shall own ! 



141 



TO - 



Is it, because upon my breast 
The heavy hand of sorrow lies, 

That smiling peace, and balmy rest 
Far from my thorny pillow flies — 

It is, because the cheerful day 
Is painful to my aching sight, 

And ev'ry prospect I survey 

Dark as the deepest shades of night— ■ 

Is it, for these, oh, man of God ! 

That stern contempt is in thine eye?— 
Thy counsel might relieve the load, 

And fix my hopes beyond the sky] 

The heart where secret sorrow reigns, 
May well demand thy pitying care ; 

For what can soothe the mourner's pains 
Like pious counsel — holy pray'r. 

Or, wouldst thou judge the soul within ! 

Presumptuous mortal ! search thy own 
Enough, to know that all have sin ; 

But God that sees, shall judge alone.. 



142 

Js it for erring man to frown 

Thus proudly on his sister-worm, 

To crush the wretched mourner down, 
And trample sorrow's prostrate form'? 

Oh ! judge not thus — lest thou be judg'd ! 

But, meekly glowing in thy breast, 
Let Christian charity be lodg'd — 

So, Heav'n is pleas'd, and thou art blest ! 

Then bright and perfect, holy man ! 

Rever'd thy character shall be — 
But never, never, harshly scan 
The heart thou mayst not judge, and cannot see. 



INCHDOKRGCK* 



Inchdorrock, through thy fairy glade, 
By heav'nly contemplation led, 
The young enthusiast oft shall rove, 
And muse within thy Druid grove. 



* Inchdorrock, or Inchdarrach, (the corner or place of oaks); 
a beautiful and romantic spot, on the banks of the river Ness, 
Inverness shire. It is the property of Mr. Young, Bookseller, of 
Inverness : a gentleman to whom the Authoress is most deeply and 
lastingly indebted. 



143 

And once among thy groves I stray'd, 
And by thy swiftly rushing river; 

But I no more shall seek thy shade — ■ 
Adieu, sweet grove, and vale, for ever ! 

Thy wilderness of shrubs and flow'rs, 
That drink the balmy summer show'rs, 
And forest-branches bending low 
To catch the breezes as they blow; 

All beam as bright on fancy's eye, 
As when, amid thy beauties straying, 

I mark'd fair Nessa gliding by, 
The sun-beams on her blue-waves playing: 

Or clamb'ring up the mountain's side, 
To pull the briar-rose' blushing pride; 
Or the wild strawb'rry, ruby red, 
To gather from its verdant bed ; 

Or further down the deep'ning way, 
My soul to pensive thought resigning, 

Where the sweet woodbine's blossom'd spray 
Round the dark Scottish fir was twining. 

Delightful spot ! — ah, never more 
These feet shall press thy verdant shore ; 
Or mark thy wild-flow'rs as they spring, 
Or hear thy woodland-warblers sing ! 

Then why recal these fairy scenes, 
With such a tender, fond emotion ] 

Oh ! they must charm while mem'ry reigns, 
Or Nessa's blue-waves seek the ocean ! 



144 

Yet wherefore sing their beauties here, 
'Mid barren rocks, and vallies drear ? 
Ah! why, but that they paint so fair 
The lovelier scenes remember'd there: 

For still, thy Druid groves among, 
(Altars to worth and virtue rearing), - 

Fancy pourtrays the taste of Young, 
In many a moral charm appearing. 

Though all unskilful is the hand 
That strikes the lyre on Thule's strand, 
Long since, best patron ! but for thee, 
That hand and lyre had ceas'd to be — 

And spurn not thou, though late, the lay 
Of liveliest gratitude the token — 

The lyre is strung, far, far away — 

The hand is weak — the heart is broken ! 

Full soon, these barren rocks among, 
That simple lyre shall lie unstrung; 
Sorrow awoke its earliest lay, 
And sorrow shrouds its closing day. 

Among Inchdorrock's rising groves, 

Where health with ev'ry breeze is blending, 

Be thine, with happiness to rove, 
Virtue and peace thy steps attending! 

And there may happier lyres be strung, 
And happier lays for thee be sung, 
Float o'er the stream, and sweetly swell 
The echoes of thy fairy dell. 



145 

And may that lov'd and lovely flow'r* 
Thy fond paternal hand is rearing, 

Acquire new graces ev'ry hour, 

And ev'ry charm and grace endearing. 

Oft through Inchdorrock's fragrant grove, 
With him, may youth and beauty rove — 
And seldom may his wand'ring feet 
Be lur'd from such a calm retreat : 

Or if his youthful heart beats high 
To leave awhile his native mountains — 

To rove beneath a brighter sky, 
Through foreign groves, by foreign fountains- 

Oh ! may they but enhance the more 
Britannia's wave-encircled shore, 
Dear Caledonia's mountain rills, 
Her forests brown, and misty hills : 

And when thy closing hour is near, 
Upon his filial breast reposing 

May Death as fair and calm appear 

As if sweet sleep thine eyes were closing ! 

Inchdorrock ! heave thy branches high, 
And bid thy balmiest zephyrs sigh ; 
Unfold thy flowers of ev'ry hue, 
And roll, sweet stream ! thy waters blue-: 



* Hugh Frazer Young, Mr. Young's only child— a very inter- 
esting and promising boy. 



146 

Wave, ye fair fields ! with golden corn, 
Ye fruit-trees ! with your load be bending ; 

And o'er the valley, eve and morn, 
Be dews prolific still descending! 

Inchdorrock ! to thy groves adieu ! 

These eyes no more thy groves shall view ; 

Save when perchance, in midnight dream 

To wander 'neath their shade I seem; 
Or think I climb thy flow'ry brae, 

Or hear the murmur of thy river — 
But, ah ! the vision flits with night away— 

Adieu, sweet spot ! adieu for ever I 



•m — ©=*- 



ADDRESS TO FANCY. 



Now busy Fancy plumes her wing, 

And flies to many a distant clime, 
Pursues the fleeting bloom of Spring, 

And mocks the ravages of fime; 
'Tis her's to lead me wide and far, 
To realms beyond the polar star, 
O'er the unfathom'd ocean's breast — 
Nor stops her weary wing to rest. 



147 

When Spring, with all her blossoms gay, 

Retires as summer flow'rs appear ; 
And Summer, stealing soft away, 

To Autumn leaves the rip'ning year: 
And e'en when Winter's stormy breath 
Consigns the flow'ry world to death, 
To other realms we'll swiftly go, 
Where still the summer-sun doth glow. 

Nor distance, danger, time, nor space, 
Bright Spirit ! shall our steps confine; 

From Pole to Pole we'll urge the race — 
The world, the mighty world, is thine ! 

Thou wand'rest down into the deep, 

Where the wreck'd mariner doth sleep ; 

Where diamonds gild the dusky wave, 

And mermaid rears her coral cave. 

Thou soarest up to yonder heav'n, 

And while the chaste moon glimmers there, 
By sportive breeze at random driv'n, 

Sailest upon the clouds of air; 
Nor beetling cliff, nor forest dread, 
But still thy daring foot may tread — 
Then stretch thy wildest wing for me, 
And I will range the globe with thee ! 

Far to the North, where the faint Sun 
Scarce darts his few and straggling rays ; 

Where deep retir'd in caverns dun 
The Greenland native hides his days; 



148 

There, Fancy ! will we speed our flight; 
And waste, in caves, the lengthen'd night; 
Share the wild native's gloomy ease, 
And find e'en savage sports can please. 

High in the puie cerulean sky 

We'll see the Northern lights arise, 

And mark their mingled squadrons fly 
Like warring armies through the skies : 

Where Cynthia, in her silver car, 

And ev'ry planet, ev'ry star, 

With double lustre brightly glow, 

Reflected in the frost below. 

Till, when the winter- solstice comes, 

The natives quit their realms of night ; 
We'll listen then their noisy drums, 

That welcome the returning light : 
While their untutor'd bards rehearse 
With gesture wild, in flowing verse, 
The noble actions of their sires, 
Or hail the Sun's rekindled fires. 

For now the rapid chace once more 

They'H urge along their moors again; 
Or jocund leave the rocky shore, 

To hunt the tenants of the main. 
Now night and day the sunny beam 
Dances on ocean, rock, and stream ; 
While, ev'ry want and wish confin'd, 
Contentment cheers the native's mind. 



149 

Then to Spitzbergen we will hie, 
Where em'rald rocks fantastic swell, 

And frozen mountains, lifted high, 
The Arctic ocean's rage repel. 

There, for no human form is near, 

We'll wander with the polar bear, 

With rein-deer o'er the deserts haste, 

And smile amid the horrid waste. 

Or turn to Iceland's lonely isle, 
Surrounded by the dashing surge, 

Where flaming Hecla, many a mile, 
Doth still her fiery torrents urge ; 

And flings around her fearful light, 

Amid the ebon shades of night, 

While Gieser's boiling fountains stream, 

Reflecting bright the lurid gleam. 

Or rove on Lapland's moon-light shore, 
And mark the Sun's departing beam ; 
Hear the hoarse billows' angry roar, 

And startle at the sea-fowl's scream. — 
But, Fancy, check thy airy plume, 
And leave these realms of savage gloom, 
Where Winter holds his joyless court; 
And to some softer clime resort — 

Where Spring, with flow'ry garlands crown'd, 
Trips lightly o'er the dewy plain ; 

Or ardent Summer throws around 
The purple fruit and yellow grain ; 



150 

To where the eastern islands rest 
Like gems on ocean's billowy breast j 
Where the Sun darts his fev'rish beam, 
And flows the Ganges' sacred stream. 

Where Indus, like the flood of time, 

Rolls his broad waters to the deep ; 
Where the tall palm-tree nods sublime, 

And graceful plaintain crowns the steep 
Where 'neath the bamboo's cool retreat, 
The panting native shuns the heat; 
Where oft the deadly snake is laid, 
And tiger couches in the shade. 

Or where the hungry leopards rage 

'Mid deserts wild, and forests rude, 
Or elephants, from age to age, 

Range 'mid the awful solitude. 
Or on Arabia's burning sands, 
Where faint the camel-driver stands, 
Nor sees one cooling spring arise, 
While his sad heart within him dies. 

And when we've travell'd ev'ry plain, 
And when our airy journey's o'er, 

We'll turn, with heartfelt joy, again 
To visit Britain's sea-girt shore : 

There patriot- worth and truth appear, 

There liberty to all is dear ; 

And still her sons united vie, 

To conquer in her cause— or die ! 



151 



TO AN HYPOCRITE. 



Thy heart is hard— thou hast no tear 
Like that which drops from Pity's eye, 

Her angel voice was never dear, 
Nor can thy bosom heave the sigh, 

The tender sigh ! for other's anguish, — 
Then, haste thee — to thy pleasures fly, 

And leave me here in grief to languish. 

Yet, thou hast said — perhaps hast sworn — 
Thy soul was tenderness and truth ! 

Go, TTyp rw ^ r i* p ' — thou oanet not mourn 

O'er a bruis'd heart, and blighted youth, 
With'ring away with grief and sorrow ! 

Or, if thou dost, I fear, in sooth, 
'Tis but the semblance thou dost borrow. 

Yet thou canst talk, oh, wond'rous well ! 

Of sympathy and feeling too ; 
And bid thy changeful bosom swell 

With pity that it never knew, 
And seem all tenderness and passion ! 

Yes ! to thy baser nature true, 
Thou weep'st, and why ?— it is the fashion ! 



152 



LINES ADDRESSED TO MRS. D* ***;*; 

LERWICK. 1813. 



Oh ! close not thus thy languid eyes, 
Nor look so deathlike, and so pale ! 

Nor heave such deep desponding sighs- 
Life yet may bloom, and joy prevail. 

Oh ! surely, to thy husband's pray'r, 
And to thy helpless infants' tears, 

The God of mercy yet will spare, 

And crown thee still with health and years; 

For their sweet saKto aionud thj bed, 
Will hear a mother's anxious sighs : 

Then raise once more that drooping head, 
And lift again those languid eyes. 

Oh ! who would nurse their tender age, 
And rear them up for heaven above, 

Or guide their steps on life's rough stage, 
Depriv'd of fond maternal love ! 

Long may that pious love be their's, 
And long their future years repay 

The ceaseless watch, the ceaseless cares, 
That led them safe in childhood's day. 



153 

But soon the sunimer-s «n ' 

And health shall breathe in ev'ry gale ; 

And flow'ry meads, and cloudless skies, 
Invite thee to the rural vale. 

There, while the limpid streamlets flow, 
In gentle murmurs o'er the plain, 

Again thy faded cheek shall glow, 
And life shall throb in ev'ry vein. 

Again thy trembling feet shall tread 
The dewy earth's delightful green ; 

And, grief and pain with winter fled, 
Thy heart shall hail and bless the scene. 

Thy children prattling in thy arms, 
Or near thee sporting, shall be found; 

And health again her brightest charms 
Diffuse on ev'ry object round. 

And long may health and peace be thine, 
And all that we on earth can know 

Of love and happiness divine — 

Till death shall close the scene below. 

Then, full of holy love and joy, 

May'st thou on wings of faith ascend, 

Where pain shall never more annoy, 
But rapture smile without an end I 

H 5 



154 



TO THE MISSES #******. 



Sweet flow'rs ! that in the rural shade 
Have blown so spotless and so fair, 

By nature's lavish hand array'd, 

And rear'd with fond parental care- — 

Health, innocence, and beauty glow 

Upon each fair and blushing cheek ; 
And yellow tresses on each brow 
Veil the blue eye that seems to speak. 

Alas ! their kind protecting shade 
Has fall'n too early to the ground ; 

And, in the house of mourning laid, 
His tender flow'rets droop around. 

And shall the blasts of sorrow bend 
These lovely, fragile blossoms low ? 

No, — pitying Heav'n will still befriend, 
And shield their gentle hearts from woe ! 

Forlorn and drear, sweet girls! by you 
Perhaps each coming hour is seen; 

But life will brighten on your view, 
And nature wear her brightest green. 



155 

And faith with patience still endures— 
Then sink not under grief and care, 

For youth and innocence like your's, 

Shall claim e'en Heav'n's protecting care ! 



TO THE NORTHERN ISLANDER. 

AUGUST, 1814. 



As sweet and grateful as the balmy show'r 

On scorched Arabia's dewless plains descending, 

When ev'ry fragrant shrub, and lovely flow'r, 

All faint and withering, to the earth are bending; 

As soft and sweetly on my pensive soul 

The soothing voice of approbation stole ! 

I felt my grief-chill'd bosom glow again 

With long-forgotten pleasure at the strain. 

Minstrel! the harp which thou hast deign'd to praise, 

Ere yet its humble notes are hush'd for ever, 
Would gladly thank thee for thy gen'rous lays — 

Then sleep in silence, and awaken never : 
Nor hung in these enchanting fragrant groves, 
Haunts of the joyous Muse, and laughing loves ! 
But rudely thrown in some dark humid cave, 
Where the lone echo mocks the hoarse sea-wave. 



156 

To these " blue isles " may'st thou in joy return, 

Heav'n, and the Muse, and love, thy lot befriending ; 
And never, never, Minstrel ! may'st thou mourn 

Thy early hopes, thy treasured friendships ending : 
But peace, and joy, and welcome, wait thee here ; 
And ev'ry tie to feeling bosoms dear, 
Still warm thy heart, and bind thy fancy more 
To these rude isles, and this wild sea-beat shore. 



ON HEARING SOME OF WALTER SCOTT's POEMS 

RECITED BY 

Mr. E *****, ADVOCATE, EDINBURGH. 
LERWICK, 1814. 



Oft has my soul in rapt attention hung, 

Oh ! northern harp ! upon thy witch-notes wild ; 

Harp ! by the Muse of Caledonia strung, 

And giv'n alone to Scott, her darling child ! 

The Poet's fame, to time's remotest age, 

Till taste and genius the wide world forsake, 

Shall glow undying in thy deathless page, 
Renown'd, and matchless "Lady of the Lake!" 



157 

Andkstill I deem'd that nothing could bestow 
Such soothing pleasure on my pensive breast, 

As o'er thy page to let the tear-drop flow, 

Glow with delight, or sink with fears oppress'd. 

Till E * * * * *, e'en to thy immortal verse, 
Such unimagin'd loveliness could give, 

That while I heard him thy sweet lays rehearse 
'Twas then, and only then, I seem'd to live ! 

'Twas then, that many a charm unfelt before, 
With brighter grace, and sweeter pathos flow'd, 

While E*****'s lips unlock'd their honied store, 
And in his face the friend, the poet glow'd ! 

Long may the poet friendship's sweets enjoy ! 

Long may the poet's harp the friend delight ! 
Their fame, nor time, nor envy can destroy, 

Till Feeling, and the Muse, are sunk in deepest 
night. 



ON THE DEATH OF HENRIETTA DUNCAN; 

4N INFANT COUSIN. 



O'er the cold grave, where infant beauties rest, 
Soft let me pause, and drop the silent tear; 

The new-laid turf lies lightly on her breast, 
And guardian angels seem to hover near. 



158 

Unhappy, she who gave thee birth, 
And fondly on thy beauties smiPd, 

Resigns thee to thy parent earth, 

And takes the last look of her child ; 

And sure thou wast the sweetest flow'r, 

That deck'd thy sorrowing father's bow'r ! 

Dark and unlovely to thy infant view, 

Appear'd this life, for scarce the gift was giv'n, 
Ere with a smile thou bad'st the world adieu, 
And wing'd again thy spotless soul to Heav'n. 
But once I clasp'd thee to ray breast, 
And fondly held thee in my arms ; 
But once thy ruby lips I press'd, 

And gaz'd upon thy op'ning charms : — 
Yet that one look did win my heart, 
And from thee I was loth to part. 

Heart-struck with sorrow, o'er thy little urn 

See thy sad mother bend, with streaming eye ; 
But, ah ! 'tis vain — 'tis impious — thus to mourn 
Her child, a cherub in the starry sky ! — 
When past is ev'ry wint'ry storm, 

And summer flow'rs begin to bloom, 
A simple fragrant wreath Til form, 
And hang it on thy early tomb : 
While tears of soft regret bedew 
The turf that hides thee from my view, 



159 



ROSA'S URN. 



'Tis night, and the moon faintly chequers the stream, 

And throws her pale lustre on Rosa's cold urn,— 
While pensive I wander beneath her pale beam, 
And sigh for the days that can never return. 
For, oh ! she was lovely, and gentle as fair 
With a form and a mind that an angel might wear; 
But now she is gone — she has left me to mourn, 
And I grieve for the days that can never return. 

I mingle my tears with the waves as they flow, 

Sweet Echo I call from her caverns to mourn ; 
To me all fair nature seems clouded with woe, 

While I weep for the days that can never return. 
The damp earth my bed, and my pillow this stone, 
No pleasure I'll court since my Rosa is gone ; 
But till life's latest moment my spirit shall mourn, * 
And grieve for the days that can never return. 



160 
THE WIDOW 

TO HER YOUTHFUL FRIENfi, 



Oh ! lovely maid ! with youth and beauty bless'd, 
With riches, health, and pleasure in thy train, 

By friends admir'd, by partial friends caress'd — - 
With pity listen to the widow's strain. 

What contrast sad between thy fate and mine ! 

Endearing friends surround thee morn and eve ; 
? Tis mine, in hopeless anguish to repine, 

'Tis mine, for ever to lament and grieve. 

Thou see'st with smiles the op'ning dawn appears, 
The brilliant Sun seems rising from the sea ; 

Morning hath shed around her dewy tears, 
And gayest blossoms hang on ev'ry tree. 

Can I feel pleasure at the op'ning dawn ? 

Can shed the Sun one beam of joy for me? 
Can peace come smiling from yon flow'ry lawn, 

Or can love blossom on life's with'ring tree? 

The light of joy, alas ! can never dawn, 
The sun of pleasure never smile on me ; 

For fate my ev'ry solace has withdrawn, 
And lopt the branches from the parent tree. 



161 

Go, lovely maid ! and pluck the rose of life ; 

Soon will it droop and languish on its thorn ; 
Smooth flow thy days, unvex'd by cares or strife, 

Thy ev'ning calm, and smiling as thy morn ! 

Of wives the happiest, most belov'd, was I, 
The envied mother of two lovely boys — 

But death, unheedful of affection's sigh, 
In one wide grave has buried all my joys. 

Pale is my cheek, and blanch' d with many a tear, 
While thou art jocund as the summer's day ; 

My form is faded, and my heart is drear, 

While health is thine, and beauty's bright array. 

Oh, Julia ! fair, and innocent as fair ! 

May no ungentle sorrow blight thy bloom, 
When I, the victim of distress and care, 

Shall shroud my sorrows in the welcome tomb. 

Nor can I wish to pour into thy breast 

Woes that might pierce a bosom hard as steel :— 

Go, go, — enjoy the moments that are blest, 
And leave me to the agonies I feel. 

Enough, that now my sorrows touch thine ear, 
And win the gen'rous pity that is due ; 

Enough, if Julia drop the friendly tear, 
And o'er my grave the simple flow'ret strew. 



162 

To that lone grave, where all my hopes are laid, 
Where mingling sleeps the dust of sire and son ; 

Say, wilt thou see Louisa's form convey'd, 
And life's last honours to her ashes done? 

For there at last shall blessed peace be giv'n, 

Stretch'd by my Arnold and each clay-cold boy; 

And when thou diest, we will stoop from heav'n, 
And greet thy spirit to the realms of joy. 



ON THE DEATH OF THE AMIABLE AND LOVELY 

MISS GEORGINA N. A. T. GRANT. 

1810. 



At thy lone tomb, Georgina dear ! 

The pious knee shall lowly bend, 
And there affection's warmest tear 

In dewy showers shall oft descend. 

Oh ! what avails it that thy form 
In beauty's perfect mould was cast ? 

The fairest flow'r must meet the storm, 
And wither in the angry blast. 



J 63 

Such was Georgina — fairest floVr 
That ever woo'd the morning gale 5 

But, ah! beneath the tempest's pow'r 
Soon droop'd the pride of yonder vale. 

Though on her cheek health's roseate glow, 
But lately blush'd so fresh and fair, 

Death's cruel messenger of woe 
Soon plac'd the sickly lily there. 

Though rich in ev'ry youthful grace, 
By nature's bounteous hand design'd, 

Faint were the beauties of her face 

Compar'd to those that deck'd her mind. 

That mind no selfish passion sway'd, 
'Twas mild and gentle as the dove ; 

And ev'ry smiling look display'd 
The soul of tenderness and love. 

To make that mind more lovely still 

Religion came, divine employ ! 
To calm each agonizing thrill, 

And shed her meek and holy joy; 

Taught her on wings of love and faith 
To heav'n's bright mansions to ascend ; 

To smile at the approach of death, 
And hail her sufF'rings in their end. 



164 

But weep not o'er yon lonely tomb,— 
The lov'd Georgina sleeps not there ; 

Yon starry heav'n is now her home, 
An angel's bliss is now her share. 

What though Georgina's mould'ring dust 
Is laid beneath yon grassy sod, 

Her soul, with millions of the just, 
Rejoices round the throne of God ! 



ON THE RETURN OF SPRING. 1810. 



Though youth and health their genial blessings bring, 

And nature hails the glad return of Spring, 

Whose lavish hand new clothes the naked ground, 

And slumb'ring vegetation wakes around ; 

Ah ! what avails it, when the deep controul 

Of sorrow flings a winter o'er the soul 1 

On death's cold cheek can life and beauty bloom, 

Or Spring revive the ashes of the tomb ? 

All nature smiles ; the gaily painted flow'r 

Springs into life, and hails the vernal hour ; 

But man, when once his little span is o'er, 

Nor Spring nor Summer can again restore. 



165 

Revive, ye woods! your leafy honours spread, 
In green luxuriance o'er the wanderer's head ; 
Perch'd on the boughs, ye feather'd warblers sing, 
And greet, with glad accord, returning Spring : 
No more in icy chains, ye Naiads ! mourn, 
But pour the sparkling stream from many an urn. 

Would selfish grief the charms of Spring destroy ?- 

Though I may mourn, yet millions may enjoy : 

Was wide creation only meant for me — 

No other heart to feel, nor eye to see ? 

No ! let me hope that many a mortal bless'd, 

Can boast the brighter sun-shine of the breast. 

For such, oh, Spring! return in all thy joy, 

No envious fate their fleeting bliss destroy I 

Nor will I waste in sorrowing strains my breath 

To chill that sunbeam with the gloom of death ; 

But all my anguish, to my breast confin'd, 

Shall prey unshar'd upon my sinking mind, 

iVnd gently steal me to the silent grave, 

Where mem'ry dies, and grief forgets to rave. 



166 



THE ADIEIL 



Adieu each fair and blooming scene, 
For Delia's feeble feet no more 

Shall press your turfs delightful green, 
Nor ramble by the windiug shore. 

Ye fragrant blossoms, never more 
Shall I inhale your sweet perfum'e, 

Nor wander at pale ev'ning's hour 
Enjoying nature's solemn gloom. 

Nor at the peep of early dawn 

Shall brush the dew-drops from the spray 
Nor loiter through yon flow'ry lawn, 

Nor through the grove nor forest stray — 

As when this form was wont to rove 
In sprightly health, and void of pain; 

When gayer blossoms deck'd each grove, 
And fresher verdure strew'd the plain ! 

But now with listless eye I see 

The Spring and all her charms return; 

In vain the Spring returns to me 
That weak with pain and sickness mourn. 



167 

I've lov'd to mark with wond'ring eyes 
The forked lightning's vivid flash ; 

To watch the howling tempest rise, 
And hear the whelming billows dash. 

The awful grandeur of the storm, 

The morning's blush, the ev'ning's gloom, 

Shall wake no more this languid form, 
That soon shall press an early tomb. 

Adieu ! ye haunts of peace and joy, 
Where once so carelessly I stray'd, 

My tranquil moments to employ, 
In yonder grove's sequester'd shade. 

But sullen now, and cheerless all, 

Is ev'ry object that I see; 
Nor can their loveliest charms recall 

The parted joys of health to me. 

For in the cold and silent tomb 

Soon, soon shall Delia's form be laid ; 

Unheedful there of vernal bloom, 
Of summer sun, and winter shade; 

And there, by all the world forgot, 

In peace my mould'ring form shall rest j 

Though scarce a tear bedew the spot 
Where lies the green turf on my breast, 



168 



LINES WRITTEN ON A STORMY NIGHT. 1813 



Wild o'er the hollow-groaning main 

Flies furious the Spirit of the storm ; 
Tempests and howling blasts compose his hideous train, 

And clouds of darkness wrap his giant form. 

The billows heaving to the skies, 

Then tumbling low as many fathoms deep — 

Mix'd with the horrid roar the drowning seaman's cries, 
As down he sinks to everlasting sleep! 

Be still, my heart, — methinks I hear 

The shriek of anguish on the moaning gale ; 

And frightful, dismal scenes of pain and. death appear, 
Struggles for parting life, and breathless corses pale ! 

Oh ! wretched she, whose arms no more 

Shall clasp her son— oh ! more than wretched wife, 

That widow'd long shalt live in anguish to deplore 
The fate of him far dearer than thy life ! 

Ye lovely babes ! now wrapp'd in sleep, 

Peaceful and calm, while howls the passing storm ! 

Ah! little do ye dream that the tempestuous deep, 
Rolls o'er vour late fond father's lifeless form. 



169 

Oh, hapless maid ! who hear'st the crash 

Of winds and waves, and see'st in Fancy's eye 

O'er thy pale lover's corse the foamy billows dash — 
Doom'd in his death a thousand deaths to die! 

If sleep her burning eye lids close, 

She sees the youth in some mysterious dream, 

Breathless and pale, while o'er his ghastly visage flows 
The life-blood mingling with the briny stream. 

She starts with horror, and awakes 

To list the dying gust with deeper dread — 

The Spirit of the Storm the troubled air forsakes, 
As loth to break the silence of the dead ! 

And ye * who lately left this shore, 

Ah ! doom'd no more your native shore to see — 
Your last faint groans were lost amid the tempest's roar, 

And your cold stormy bed the wintry sea. 

Ye sank the victims of the deep, 

The cruel, treach'rous deep, and ruthless storm ! 
Far, far beneath its waves on coral beds ye sleep, 

And sea-green plants enshroud each lifeless form. 



* The Doris, of Lerwick, was lost on the coast of Aberdeen, in 
the month of February, 1813. Besides the pecuniary loss sustained 
by many of the inhabitants of the Zetland isles, several gentlemen 



170 

Ah ! never more th' expecting friend 

Shall greet the luckless Doris' distant sail; 

Each cherish'd hope, alas ! and boding fear must end, 
As time confirms the melancholy tale. 

And thou, oh, Melby ! art thou gone — 
In life's meridian snatch'd so soon away ! 

For thee, but all in vain, love, wealth and pleasure shone, 
Nor could th' appointed hour one moment stay. 

And, Duncan, thou, whose soul refin'd 

From worldly dross, had long been nVd above, 

Far, far beyond the stars, in happier realms to rind 
The beauteous object of thy early love — 

Thy spirit 'rapt in praise and pray'r, 

Serene, though death and horror glar'd around, 

Consigned with glowing faith thy babes to Heav'n's sweet 
care ; 
Then sunk to rest amid the deep profound ! 

Poor Henderson! sure many storms, 

Ere this, had pass'd all scathless o'er thy head; 

But now the fatal blast its destiny performs, 
And numbers thee too early with the dead. 



of property, and of the first respectability in the place, were lost ; 
and mothers, wives, and children, were suddenly plunged into dis- 
tress and sorrow of the most melancholy and afflicting nature. 



I 



171 

And ye, a mother's only prop, 

Kept from her widow'd heart in blooming youth ! 
In your cold wat'ry bed sinks down her ev'ry hope, 

And the fair promise of your worth and truth. 

Hope, too, had whisper 1 d in thine ear, 
Ill-fated Angus ! many a rapturous tale 

Of love and joy to come— now on a wat'ry bier 
Floats thy disfigur'd form all ghastly pale. 

Sinclair, in vain thy bride shall wait 

The sail that wafts thee o'er the wat'ry plain — 
In place of love, and joy for thee, ah ! hapless fate ! 

A grave beneath the dark and stormy main 

Oh ! my heart bleeds these babes to see, 
Smiling unconscious of their father's doom : 

Long shall the prattlers wait to ken with noisy glee 
The bark that bears the worthy Cragie home. 

Oh, lovely infants ! 'tis in vain — 

Your widow'd mother never more shall view 

Your fond and worthy sire e'er reach this shore again 
His last it was indeed, a last adieu ! 

Nor these alone, ah, me ! are mourn'd — 
What other widows, other orphans weep 

For those that parted hence, and never more return'd- 
Rock'd in the waves to everlasting sleep ! 



172 

But, oh ! may Heav'n the healing balm 

Of peace and comfort pour into their wounds, 

And through their grief-fraught hearts breathe a pure 
holy calm. 
And lift tlieir thoughts beyond earth's narrow bounds. 

Now faint and fainter on mine ear 

Comes the loud ocean-swell, and tempest's roar; 
Pale in the cloudy east I see the dawn appear 

And the long Thulean night at length is o'er. 

The morning, peering o'er the hill, 

Tinges with wat'ry light the dark green seas, 

Whose waves are hush'd to rest, while the wind soft and 
still 
Sinks to the whisper of a summer breeze. 

So shall another rising day 

Beam on those eyes clos'd by Death's chilly hand; 
The world, the mighty deep, and all shall pass away— 

But they shall live again at God's command. 

Oh ! may these souls recall'd by Thee, 

In thy good time to happier life arise, 
And round thy throne rejoice, from sin and sorrow free, 

In glorious realms, far, far above the skies! 



173 

ON THE DEATH OF 

MISS URSULA EDMONDSTONE, 

OF ZETLAND. 



Where low thou li'st, lamented Fair ! 

The Virtues and the Graces weep, 
And viewless beings hover there 

To watch thy long and dreamless sleep. 

For thou wast pure in heart and mind, 

As is the dewy tear of morn, 
And ev'ry outward grace combin'd 

Thy faultless person to adorn. 

Oh ! born to charm the willing soul 
With native sweetness free from guile, 

And bend it to thy soft controul 

With youthful beauty's witching smile — 

Those lips where magic sweetness play'd 
Delight the list'ning ear no more, — 

Silent, and cold lamented maid ! 

Thy short and blameless course is o'er. 



174 

O'er thy sad couch with looks of love 
Thy angel sister* seem'd to bend, 

And pointing to the realms above, 
She warn'd thee of thy coming end. 

Lovelier than ever mortal eye 

Beheld, or mortal heart conceiv'd, 

She hover'd o'er thee, while the sigh 
Still from thy anguish'd bosom heav'd. 

When on affection's throbbing breast, 
Thy last, faint, fluttering sigh was giv'n, 

When thy rack'd frame sunk down to rest, 
She bore thee to thy native heav'n. 

Ye mourning parents cease to weep; 

Her sufferings and her pangs are o'er, 
And sweet and tranquil is her sleep 

Where pain can never reach her more. 

And to that blissful, happy land, 

The stream of time shall waft you on, 

And bring you there by Heav'n's command, 
When some few fleeting years are gone. 

And when in death ye close your eyes, 
Your children shall descend from heav'n, 

And waft your spirits to the skies, 
Where Virtue's blest reward is giv'n. 



* A lovely and amiable sister who died some years before 



175 
ON THE DEATH OFM***** n**.*****- 

THE SON OF CAPTAIN N ******* 



The genial season comes with balmy dews, 
And western breezes sporting in her train ; 

Deck'd in her flowing robe of rainbow hues, 
She paints with lavish hand the hill and plain. 

Th' unfolding blossoms load the gentle gale 

With mingling sweets ; the sky-lark soars on high, 

Ere yet the waning moon her crescent pale 
Hath quite extinguish'd in the kindling sky. 

Fair is the promise of the days to come, 

Th' incumbent harvest soon shall load the ground, 

And rising youth in health and strength shall bloom, 
And smiling hope be with fruition crown'd. 

Oh ! trust not these — they are deceitful all ; 

The storm may rise, the east wind's chilling breath 
May blast thy hopes, and blooming youth may fall, 
'Mid all its vigour, in the arms of death. 

E'en prattling childhood while it lisps its joy, 
And blooms far sweeter than the sweetest flow'r, 

May drop as thou hast done— oh, beauteous boy! 
And pain embitter ev'ry lingering hour. 



176 

No more thy little foot's elastic tread 

Shall from the green grass brush the morning dew, 
Nor bounding o'er the pavement's level bed, 

With wild delight the flying ball pursue. 

No more those sparkling eyes of loveliest blue, 

Through which thy guiltless soul would almost speak, 

Shall beam with rapture, nor the blushing hue 
Of rosy health adorn thy dimpled cheek. 

Pale, pale that cheek, and languid is that eye, 
And quick, yet faint, th' unequal pulses play ; 

Oft from thy little bosom bursts the sigh, 
And life itself is ebbing fast away. 

Yet thou shalt bloom when ev'ry flow'r shall fade — 
Thy God, thy heav'nly Father calls thee home, 

Commission^! angels hover o'er thy bed, 
Whispering in accents soft, " Sweet cherub, come ! 

Come to the land of everlasting rest, 

Where grief no more shall sighs of anguish raise, 
And mingle with the millions of the blest 

Circling Jehovah's throne with songs of praise. 

Come to the bosom of thy Saviour, come ; 

To peace eternal and a bliss divine ; 
Come to the glorious, everlasting home, 

Purchased by his dear blood, for spirits pure as thine !" 



177 



ON SEEING A LADY AT THE GRAVE OF HER 
INFANT SON. 



Discons'late at thy infant's tomb, 
While ev'ning wraps the world in gloom, 

Why, lovely mourner, art thou laid? 
Nought here remains but mould'ring clay- 
To realms of everlasting day, 

Th' immortal soul has fled ! 

Oh ! think upon the many cares 

That might have dimm'd tiis future years, 

Had the dear, clierish'd boy been spar'd,- 
But pain and sorrow's ghastly band 
Can never reach the blessed land 

For happy souls prepar'd. 

Then quit this dark and mournful scene, 
And seek thy social home again, 

Where thy surviving babes shall smile, 
And clasp thee in their little arms, 
And with a thousand artless charms 

Thy ev'ry care beguile. 

Be thine the task to lead their youth 
Through all the paths of moral truth; — 

To thee the solemn charge is giv'n, 
To watch their -teps through ev'ry snare, 
To rear them with a mother's care, 

And fit their souls for heav'n I 
15 



178 
THE GRAVE OF A MAN OF WORTH. 



Hail, lonely spot of holy ground ! 
Where sleep, in death's cold fetters bound, 
The relics of a man of worth — 
Tread lightly on the sacred earth 
That wraps his lowly pillow'd head, 

And presses on his throbless breast ; 
And view with rev'rence meet, the bed 

Where the soul's earthly mansion sinks to rest. 

The very winds of heav'n do blow 

Softly, as if they fear'd to break 
The slumbers of the dead below; 

And even sorrow here forbears to make 
Her wailings wild, but soothed to solemn woe 
Drops the mute tear unseen — while from above 
Angelic beings bend with smiles of love. 

Let no unhallow'd foot intrude 

Upon this sacred solitude! 

All pure must be the tear, as summer show'rs, 

That falls, oh Allen ! on thy peaceful bed — 
Pure as the dew upon the simple flow'rs 

That o'er thy turf their grateful fragrance shed. 

Pure as that dew was thy unspotted mind, 
Where bright religion held unrivall'd sway; 

And charity, and love to human kind, 
And ev'ry virtue cheer'd thy little day, 



179 

That glow'd as 'twere -but with a morning light, 
Then faded fast, and set in early night ! 

But not for ever set— a day shall rise 
When the broad face of heav'n shall melt away, 
The world with all her wonders shall decay, 

And nature tremble at her final doom; 
But thou shalt live in the eternal skies, 

Victorious over death, triumphant o'er the tomb ! 



THE GRAVE OF ABBOT. 



From Erin's isle a stranger came ; 

Sunk was his cheek, and dim his eye, 
And the still fair but wasted frame, 

Spoke the last hour of suff'ring nigh. 
His vouth was like a lovely spring 

Foretelling summer's joyful time — 
But fell disease was on the wing, 

And blaste<l Abbot's hopeful prime ; 
Laid all his graces in the dust, 

And cropt his honours in their bloom ;— 
But Abbot's was the Christian's trust — 

He look'd with faith beyond the tomb! 

* Montague Abbot, an officer of marines, who was carried from 
on board the Venus frigate, in the last stage of a consumption; and 
died at Lerwick, in the spring of 1811. 



180 

Nurtur'd amid the sons of war 

He acted there a gallant part, 
Yet, his were graces lovelier far — 

The softer virtues of the heart ! 
His was the bosom taught to glow 

With friendship warm and passion true, 
And he would sigh for others' woe, 

Nor less relieve, than pity too. 
Poor stranger! o'er thy bed of death 

Strangers with love and pity hung — 
And watch'd with grief thy parting breath,. 

And the last faulter of thy tongue. 
They watch'd thine eye so mild and meek, 

Where faith and resignation beam'd ; 
And saw when on thy pallid cheek 

The tear, for youthful follies, gleam'd. 
And, Stranger, o'er thy nanow bed 

A pensive stranger drops the tear, 
And where, unmark'd. thy gentle head 

Is pillow'd, weeps and wanders near. 
And the\ who knew thy early worth, 

Abbot, shall weep thy mournful doom; 
And shade thy consecrated earth 

With the dark marble's sable gloom; 
To show the distant, humble grave 

"Where lies the turf on Abbot's breast"— 
For he, like Erin's sons, was brave — 

Then honour'd be his bed of rest! 



181 
FADED PLEASURES. 



How happy they, who, blest with health, 
Can tread the flow'r-enamelled plain, 

Nor heave one sigh for pomp or wealth, 
Nor waste their days in search of gain. 

The happiest of their kind they roam, 
From heart-corroding-anguish free ; 

Their's is a humble, happy home, 

Oh ! — had such bliss been stor'd for me ! 

Cheerless I see the sun arise ; 

And listless mark his setting beam 
With crimson paint the western skies; 

And still of faded pleasures dream. 

Pleasures that never can return ; 

Yet, ah ! while mem'ry holds her place, 
Their rapid flight shall Ella mourn, 

And still those faded pleasures trace. 



182 
THOUGHTS ON A BEAUTIFUL NIGHT. 



The moon in cloudless majesty, 

Her silv'ry tresses streaming round, 
Illumes the gently heaving sea, 
And dew-drops sparkle on the ground. 

Oh ! 'tis a night when mis'ry lifts 

Her streaming eyes from earth-born care ; 
Searching for happiness, and peace, 

She looks to heav'n, and finds them there. 

Deluded mortals vainly hope 
Immortal joys on earth to find ; 

Eager at airy shadows grasp — 
But grasp, alas ! the empty wind ! 

Deluded mortals ! search no more — 
Far from your touch the vision flies ; 

In heav'n alone the seraph dwells — 
Then seek her in the starry skies. 

Enthusiast, go! with panting breast, 
On ptofter'd friendship's truth rely, — 

Thy friend shall wring thy simple heart, 
And break through ev'ry tender tie. 



183 

In early life's unsullied morn, 

When hope the lover's breast beguiles, 
How fair the op'ning world appears, 

How gay each flatt'ring prospect smiles ! 

But, ah ! beware — for broken vows 
May deeply rend thy feeling soul ! 

Love's barbed arrows rankle there, 
And anguish rules without controul. 

Now man enjoys his sweetest hours, 
And sunk in soft and calm repose, 

Kind sleep awhile the curtain draws 
Of sweet oblivion o'er his woes. 

For oft the roseate morning brings 
A num'rous train of rising ills; 

And oft the mildly pensive eve 

The breaking heart with anguish fills. 

Come, Morpheus ! king of airy dreams, 
Oh ! come, my drowsy eye-lids close; 

Let me forget each worldly care, 
And on thy downy breast repose. 

For yet no crime my bosom stains, 

My conscience from remorse is free ;— 

All day disturb'd, oppress'd with cares, 
I court forgetfulness and thee ! 



184 



ON HEARING MOURNFUL MUSIC. 



Sweet minstrel of the harp of woe! 

Whoe'er thou art that pour'st the strain, 
Such sweetness in thy numbers flow, 

Say, can the source be real pain? 

Methinks, as on my pensive ear 

The dulcet harp's wild wailings flow, 

I mark the frequent gushing tear 
Stream o'er the pallid cheek of woe. 

Bard of the lyre of mournful sound! 

Oh! give that mournful lyre to me, 
And when pale evning steals around, 

My sad companion it shall be. 

Then, seated by some murm'ring stream, 
Beneath some old tree's ample shade, 

To paint some sad and mournful dream 
I'll court thy harp's melodious aid. 

Since hope again from heav'n descends, 
And from thy bosom drives despair, 

i^nd bright each waking morn attends — 
Be mine alone the Harp of Care. 



185 

For I to ev'ry joy am dead, 

With me the nymph, sweet pleasure ! dies, 
And hope and happiness have fled 

To seek their distant native skies. 

'Tis thine, whom hope once more shall cheer, 
To bid thy harp symphonious ring 

With rapturous music on the ear ; 
And love and beauty's praise to sing. 

'Tis mine to bid each trembling wire, 

Reverberate to the notes of woe, 
And wake to sadder tones the lyre, 

That even yet were heard to flow. 

While listening to its dying falls, 

Soothing the last dread parting pain, 

My soul shall burst its prison-walls, 
And soar to heav'n upon the strain. 

EDWIN'S WISH. 



Give me, kind Heav'n! I ask no more, 

In some sequester'd grove, 
A cottage neat, before whose door 

Meandering streamlets rove ; 



188 

Where 'mid the boughs, the feather'd race 

Oft perch and sweetly sing; 
Wild warbled music fill the place, 

And through the woodlands ring; 

Where Flora doth each path adorn 

With flow'rs of ev'ry hue — 
The blushing rose upon the thorn, 

The violet darkly blue ; 

Primroses on the banks be seen, 
Where murm'ring waters play; 

Let simple daisies gem the green, 
And ev'ry spot be gay ; 

The lily cloth'd in purest white, 

The pansy, gold and blue, 
Spread her gay leaves to catch the light ; 

The yellow cowslip too. 

To crown the whole, some gentle fair 

Whose heart can truly love, 
To share with me each anxious care, 

And all my pleasures prove. 

Then smiles shall smooth the path of life, 

And time shall only blend 
The tend'rest mother, tend'rest mtj, 

The best and dearest friend ! 



187 

There, void of care, our days shall roll 
In tranquil peace and love ; 

Till death shall free th' immortal soul 
To brighter realms above ! 



MIDNIGHT SCENE. 



Now midnight draws her murky veil, 

Now the sad Spirit of the gale 

Within his humid rocky cave 

Sits moaning to the dashing wave ; 

The angry demons of the deep 

Are gone to rest — the storm's asleep ; 

And ev'ry sound is hush'd to rest, 

Save zephyr rippling Ocean's breast. 

How full and round the moon appears ! 

O'er the ward-hill her head she rears, 

While on the smooth and glassy streams, 

Lightly dance her silv'ry beams. 

The fairies, deck'd with daisies trim, 

Dance upon the clear loch's brim, 

On the grassy border play, 

And bask them in the lunar ray. 

Or where green ocean's billow laves, 

Some sea-nymph charms the list'ning waves, 

And seated on some rocky steep 

Sings the dangers of the deep ; 

She sings of many a gallant tar, 

That oft had brav'd the dubious war, 



188 

Returning home to greet once more 
His lov'd and long-lost native shore, 
And tiy to her whose image dear 
In ev'ry toil had yet been near ; 
Like some attending angel-pow'r 
Had sooth'd him in each fearful hour, 
When battle rag'd, or hurtling storm 
Hovvl'd o'er the vessel's dusky form, 
And still had cheer'd with sacred beam 
His daily thought and nightly dream. 
A fair wind fills the swelling sails, 
And joy o'er ev'ry heart prevails, 
As on they speed to Britain's isle 
Where Freedom, Peace, and Vajour smile. 

But ah ! the flatt'ring calm is o'er,-— 
Sailors ! ye see your homes no more ! 
The demons of the storm arise, 
And lo ! a wreck the vessel lies. 
In vain the trembling maid shall mourn, 
And chide her sailor's slow return : 
That hero, dash'd on rugged shore, 
To her, alas ! returns no more, 
But lock'd in death's long, dreary sleep, 
Slumbers in the oozy deep ! 
His grave by sea-green nymphs is deck'd, 
Nor shall the pensive choir neglect 
To sing his requiem, sad and clear, 
And soothe the Spirit wandering near ; 
And oft when night's deep shadows lour 
Their heav'n-taught melody shall pour 
O'er the broad ocean's stormy breast, 
And charm the swelling waves to rest. 



189 



STANZAS. 1812. 



Sad is thy voice, thou hollow moaning gale ! 

Departed Spirits seem to linger near ; 
E'en now, methinks ! some sheeted spectre pale 5 

Stalks by my side, and whispers in mine ear. 
The life-blood freezes in my trembling frame, 

As the dim waning moon her pallid glare 
Cast on those clayey features ! 'tis the same — 

And this is all that is, of what was once so fair ! 

" Beware/' she sighs, " beware of ev'ry art, 

That man will use to steal thy peace away ; 
For his the plotting head, the guileful heart, 

And his the lips that smile but to betray. 
When last we met I blush'd in beauty's bloom — 

A father's hope, a father's fond delight; — 
But view me now — the tenant of the tomb ! 

My star for ever set, that lately rose so bright. 

Oh ! steel thy bosom 'gainst th' insidious foe, 

And dread the poison of a lover's sigh ; — 
For what can poor deserted woman do — 

Conceal her anguish, break her heart, and die ! 
Hope not their breast with love or truth can glow, 

Slaves to the world, the sordid slaves of gold ! 
Such A****** was, and I am laid full low ! 

But see ! the morning gleams — my mournful tale is told.' 



190 

And now she glides away, and mingles slow 

With the deep shades — my awful fears depart, 
And now again I feel the life-blood glow, 

That almost stopp'd and curdled at my heart. 
Ill-fated, lovely Ann ! — yes, I will keep 

Thy mournful story treasur'd in my breast ; 
And oft will muse upon thy fate, and weep 

O'er the cold narrow bed where thou dost rest ! 



THE DAWN OF DAY. 

SEPTEMBER 30, 1813. 



The dewy morn so soft and still, 
Peeps over Brassa's heath-clad hill : 
Nor may the slightest breath of breeze 
Break the broad mirror of the seas, 
That shows the rudely pencil'd Baard,* 
And thy dark brow, majestic Ward, 
Rising from the azure wave, 
That scarcely dares thy feet to lave ! 
But though so stilly and so deep, 
At thy green base the billows sleep, 
The Baasf of Bolster's sullen roar 
Echo along the rocky shore. 

* " Baard" is a very high rock, covered to its " giddy edge'' by 
a beautiful green-sward. 

t "Baas'' are rocks overflowed by the sea, bat visible at low 



191 

The silver moon, far in the west, 
Sinks in her cloudy bed to rest, 
Where deeper hang the gathering shades, 
As by degrees her pale light fades : 
Soft show'rs unheard, and scarcely seen, 
Descend upon the with' sing green ; 
Slow rolling mists the landscape shroud, 
" And kerchief 'd in a homely cloud," 
The dewy morn, through twilight pale, 
Smiles, sadly sweet, on hill and dale. 

Oh ! loveliest scene, and yet so sad,— 
More dear to me than sun-shine glad ! 
The bitter, troublous cares of life, 
And all their turmoil, all their strife, 
Seem slumb'ring with the glare of day, 
And meditation's holy sway, 
Sublimes to loftier views the mind, 
To wonder, love, and praise resigned. 

Where now, the proud, the scornful look, 
That timid sorrow scarce can brook — 
The bitter taunt, the cruel sneer, 
That even friendship's face can wear — 



water. Those alluded to above, take their name from a place 
called Boister, in the Island of Brassa, on the coast of which they 
are situated. The roar of the waves over them is heard, even in 
the calmest night, at Lerwick ; and the awful effect it produces, 
when no living object interrupts the tranquillity of the scene, and 
every other sound is ^hushed, may be more easily imagined than 
described. 



192 

And cold neglect, that day by day 
Consumes the mourner's life away ! 
Where now, the agony of heart 
That faithless friendship can impart! 
Oh ! it is worse than ail the rest, — 
It poisons, while it wounds the breast ! 
And neither time, nor reason's sway 
Can pluck the fatal thorn away. 

Now like some dark distressful dream 
That cross'd the brain, these sorrows seem ; 
And 'mid this heav'nly breathing calm 
If tears are shed, such tears are balm ! — 
Such tears are mine — — although they flow 
From sources of severest woe, 
They fall as softly as the show'rs 
Fall on the fading grass and flow'rs. 

Oh! Thou, whose grace can thus impart, 
Ease to a bruis'd and bleeding heart, 
Accept the praise my lips would give, 
And let me to thy glory live ! 
From Thee each blessing I have known, 
Each warm regard that friends have shown, 
From Thee, alone, oh God ! they came, 
And shalt not Thou, thine own reclaim ! 

If the full tide of bitter woe 
Has made these aching eyes o'erflow; 
If to my lips with deep-drawn sighs 
One impious murmur e'er did rise, 



193 

Forgive me, bright Omnipotence ! 
And to this erring heart dispense 
The grace to feel, the faith to know, 
That whom thou lov'st, thou chast'nest so. 
And when the snares of busy day 
Again beset my weary way, 
Oh ! let thy pow'r, my God ! controul 
The warring passions of my soul ; 
Give me to see, and choose the right, 
And guard me both by day and night ! 



THE UNKNOWN. 



Proudly thou swell'st almost to bursting — 
Wilt thou not break at once, poor wounded heart ! 

Too softly fram'd — too fondly trusting — 
Thou bleed'st, the victim of another's art I 

As one by one the tears are stealing 
From thy blue eyes, the life-blood in thy breast 

Fell sorrow's fatal touch congealing, 
It freezes there and now thou art at rest. 

Farewell, thou blighted one, for ever ! 
The secret grief thou bad'st my soul revere, 

That crush'd thee at the last, siiall never 
Break from my lip, nor breathe on mortal ear. 

K 



194 

THE UNGENEROUS. 

LERWICK, 1813. 



I read the language of thine eyes, 
And feel my bosom proudly swell — 

I can thy narrow mind despise, 

And all thy little thoughts can tell. 

No hoarded stores of gold I boast, 
Nor lands, nor tenements, are mine; 

Yet, not for all on India's coast. 
Would I possess a soul like thine ! 

Then go,— -enjoy thy valued wealth, 
And still thy fav'ring smiles refuse: 

Kind Heav'n will grant me peace and health, 
And leave me virtue and the Muse. 



SUMMER, 1813. 



Yes, thou hast come again, with joy and love, 
All smiling Summer! — beauteous are thy scenes, 

Though here, nor darksome wood, nor fragrant grove 
From the hot sun the pensive wand'rer screens. 



195 

'Neath the high cliff, that o'er the murm'ring wave 
Projecting hangs, my languid form I lay — 

To muse upon my journey's end— the grave ! 
And all the scenes of life now pass'd away, 

Pass'd are the days, when sportive childhood here 
Tripp'd with light step, and lighter heart, the shore, 

And pass'd the days, when my rude harp was dear 
To many a list'ning friend that lists no more. 

Oh ! days, for ever gone — and friends ! no more 
Your love shall soothe me, or your praise delight — 

Till glad ye greet me on that happy shore 
Far, far beyond these gloomy realms of night. 

Unconscious childhood ! best and happiest time ! 

When life is new, and joy and fancy young ; 
Then nature blooms in all her vernal prime, 

And sweet the music of Hope's syren tongue. 

Free as the breeze that wings its viewless way, 

The infant fancy still delights to rove ; 
With boundless rapture hails the dawning day, 

And dreams of friendship, confidence, and love. 

Fatal repose! — that but more keenly wakes 
The sigh of anguish, and the burning tear, 

When hope, and friendship too, the soul forsakes, 
And leaves the world all cheerless, void, and drear! 



196 

Enliv'ning Summer! sweet thy breezes blow; 

O'er the blue waves they shake the dewy wing ; 
Thy fragrant wild-flowers in the meadows glow, 

And feather'd warblers bid the echoes ring. 

Fair as thou art, fair Summer ! thou must die- 
Short in this cloudy region, is thy reign ; 

The howling storm shall darken o'er the sky, 
And wither all thy flow'rets on the plain. 

And shorter still our fleeting summer day! 

Too soon, alas ! life's wintry storms arise — 
Then let us fix our hopes, where best we may, 

And look for comfort, only, in the skies. 



FRIENDSHIP AND LOVE. 



What is Friendship — what is Love?— 
Say, did they ever deign to smile 

On man, or quit the realms above 
To sweeten all his care and toil ? 

Friendship is a lovely flow'r, 

That gaily blooms to summer-skies; 

But, ah ! in sorrow's trying hour 
The sickly blossom droops and dies. 



197 

Love is the shadow of a shade, 

A nothing of the brain — a dream— 

A tale by fabling poets made, 

False as the false moon's changeful beam ! 



THE FAREWELL. 



Oh ! dear native country, where first I drew breath, 
Dear Hall, which belong'd to my grandsues of yore, 

Dear shade, where I've vow'd to be constant till death 
To the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor; 

Dear objects, adieu ! I must leave you awhile, 
And wander away to soure far distant shore, 

Yet I'll think of each look, and I'll cherish each smile, 
Of the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor. 

Though orange groves breathe a rich gale of perfume, 
And a fragrance unknown to our cold Northern shore, 

Yet I'll sigh for our woodlands, and forests' deep gloom, 
And the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor. 

Adieu to our woodlands, our forests, adieu! 

Yet still my fond bosom their loss shall deplore; 
And my heart, unestrangd, shall for ever lie true 

To the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor. 



198 

For what though Pm forc'd, oh ! my Laura, to roam 
From thee far away, and my dear native shore, 

Love shines like a star, and shall soon guide me home 
To the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor. 

Then, happy indeed ! in my own native land 
I'll fix my abode, and will wander no more ; 

Bless'd with more than a crown, in the heart and the hand 
Of the maid of the cottage that stands on the moor. 



THE REVIVAL. 



Sweet, Hope! enchanting nymph, appear! 

And bring thy laughing train with thee; 
Illume the dreary coming year, 

And set the wild nymph, Fancy, free. 
For Spring has fled this many a day, 

Bright Summer dwells on happier plains ; 
E'en yellow Autumn fades away, 

And gloomy Winter only reigns; 
Yet, what though gloomy Winter reign 

A despot o'er the blasted year, 
Shall I dull melancholy feign, 

Or heave a sigh, or shed a tear 1 
Away then, dark despondency ! 
This breast shall never harbour thee ! 



199 

Though fortune frown, though nature lour, 

Remorse that comes like deadly foe, 
And dark despair's afflicting pow'r, 

The guiltless heart, can never know ! 
Then, what though fortune on me frown, 

Shall sorrow's tear descend for this] 
Hope shall the humble prospect crown, 

And point to scenes of future bliss- 
Hilarity and mirth shall lead, 

In jocund bands, the circling year, 
Till Spring again shall deck the mead, 

And Winter's horrors disappear. 
Away then, dark despondency ! 
This breast shall never harbour thee ! 



THE RELAPSE. 



Hope! thou sweet, yet faithless fair! 

Ne'er wake again thy smiles for me ; 
For I am doom'd the slave of care, 

The daughter of Despondency. 

I haii'd thee, like the op'ning morn, 

From gloomy night's dark phantoms free 

But thou hast left me more forlorn — 
The daughter of Despondency ! 



200 



SYMPATHY. 



Sweet is the balmy breath of morn, 
When Summer sheds her rich perfume; 

And sweet the dew-drops that adorn 
The op'ning rose-bud's crimson bloom. 

But sweeter are the sighs I hear, 
That Clara's pitying heart reveal; 

And lovelier is the falling tear 

That down her tender cheek doth steal, 



STANZAS. 



Go, tell the beauteous girl I love, 
That I upbraid her long delay; 

Tell her, no joy can William prove, 
Whilst dear Eliza is away. 

Alas ! dear maid, if fav'ring gales 
To-morrow kiss the rippling sea, 

Soft sighing through our swelling sails, 
They'll waft me far from love and thee. 



201 



MARY'S TOMB. 



Now the trembling moonbeams sleep 
On the dew-bespangled ground; 

By thy narrow bed I weep, 

While the Virtues mourn around. 

On the damp, cold earth I lie, 
Calling on my Mary's name; 

There lies buried all my joy — 
All my early hopes and fame. 

Can the world delight me more? 

What is all the world to me ! 
My sun is set, my day is o'er — 

Now, my love, I haste to thee. 

Sweet, my Mary, is thy sleep, 
In thy dark, cold, narrow bed ; 

There 1 soon shall cease to weep, 
There shall rest my weary head. 



•+*■*■**++■**' 



K 5 



202 



ORLANDO. 



High on a rock whose rugged brow 

Far o'er the murm'ring sea wave hung, 
Orlando sat, the child of woe! 

And thus the dying mourner sung — 
His humble harp of simplest tone 
Lean'd careless on a mossy stone ; 
The tears of sorrow dimm'd his fading eye, 
But pride suppressed the groan, and hush'd the lab'ring 
sigh. — 



■»■ 



" Go, sleep in silence evermore, 

Sweet solace thou, my hapless lyre ! 
Go, moulder on the storm-beat shore, 

And bid thy ev'ry note expire: 
Oh ! I have woo'd the world too long, 
And tamely bow'd to many a wrong; 
Curb'd the indignant spirit in my breast, 
And stoop'd degenerate down to folly's gilded crest. 

Too long has fancy lov'd to dream 

That hearts were warm, and friends were true; 
'Twere better trust the fickle gleam 
Of sunshine on the billows blue, 
Than hope on earthly soil to find 
The nobler virtues of the mind ; 
For sordid int'rest warps the love of truth, 
Alike in frigid age and tender blooming youth. 



203 

One miser thirst pervades the whole, 

Unheedful of another's care ; 
One narrow selfishness of soul 

That blunts each softer passion there. — 
But sleep, my harp ! for ever rest: 
The sun is trembling in the west; 
And ere that sun illumes to-morrow's sky, 
Cold on the winds of morn shall breathe my latest sigh." 

In vain the tears of pity flow 

For him who pour'd the pensive lay; 
From toil escap'd, and want, and woe, 

In yon bright heav'n's eternal day 
Orlando lives ; — by the rude stone 
His once lov'd harp is careless thrown ; 
Yet oft responsive, as the breezes fly, 
The trembling strings awake their mournful melody. 

And oft the sea boy's listening ear 

Doth catch the wild and plaintive sound, 

As sails the lonely vessel near, 

At midnight, when the waves around 

Are hush'd, and Cynthia's placid beam 

Slumbers along the level stream; 

Upward he looks with wond'ring eye, 

And thinks some spirit of the sky 
Steals o'er the tranquil bosom of the deep, 
And sings their solemn dirge that in the ocean sleep. 



204 

ON HEARING OF THE DEATH OF 
GEORGINA CHARLOTTE GORDON BOOKER, 

NIECE TO HIS GRACE THE DUKE OF GORDON. 
1815. 



Now youth and merit fill the sable bier, 
And lacerated friendship drops the tear i— 
Year chases year, decay pursues decay, 
And steals some joy from with'ring life away. 

JOHNSON. 



And are thy blue eyes, Charlotte, clos'd in death? 

And his pale signet stamp'd upon thy face; 
And hush'd, for ever hush'd, that tuneful breath, 

And thy fair form despoil'd of ev'ry grace? — 
And art thou laid in thy last resting place ? 

Ah! envied rest! — Yet thou wast in the bloom 
Of early life, and lodg'd in the embrace 

Of friends and fortune: — now the mournful tomb 

Enshrines thee in its dark sepulchral gloom. 

Farewell, sweet Charlotte! gentle friend, adieu! 

Few were thy days, and short thy sojourn here; 
But, yet unmark'd by sorrows as they flew, 

Or aught of grief, save pity's tender tear— 
For pity to thy feeling heart was dear, 

And thine the sigh that heav'd for other's woes; 
The gentler Virtues mourn around thy bier, 

And guard the hallow'd spot of thy repose, 

While friendship's purest tear profusely flows! 



205 



ON THE DEATH OF MISS ANN GRANT, 
OF BIRDSYARDS. 



" As those we love decay, we die in part, 
String after string is sever'd from the heart.'* 



When last we parted, gentlest friend ! 

Thy streaming tears bedew'd my cheek, 
And sighs, that seem'd thy heart to rend, 

Confessed the grief thou could'st not speak ; 

And when we breath'd a sad adieu, 

Thou saidst that we should meet no more — 

Ah ! wherefore were thy words so true— 
We meet not till this life is o'er ! 

Thine is the silence of the tomb, 

And thine that calm and peaceful sleep 

Where sorrow cannot pierce its gloom, 
Nor weary nature wake to weep. 

Then should I wish thee lingering here, 
The bitter dregs of life to drain? 

Ah ! no,- I check the gushing tear, 
And ev'ry selfish wish restrain. 



206 

Yet mem'ry still, dear parted maid ! 

Shall hover round thy grassy tomb ; 
And deck the spot where thou art laid, 

With simple rlow'rs of freshest bloom ; 

The flow'rs I mean, are love and truth, 
Warm off 'rings from a heart sincere ! 

And such as thy translated youth 
And angel-state, may deign to hear. 

Warm-hearted, gen'rous, tender friend ! 

Adieu! — yet, not a long adieu — 
For soon this mortal state shall end, 

And I shall be at rest like you. 

A few and evil years gone by> 

No longer toss'd on life's rough wave, 
The mourner and the mourn'd shall lie 

Together in the peaceful grave. 



INDEPENDENCE. 



I sigh not for the charms of pow'r, 
Nor glitt'ring stores of wealth; 

I sigh for peace in some lone bow'r, 
With competence and health. 



207 

I sigh to wander unconfin'd, 
Where noise shall never come, 

Nor Envy's weak and narrow mind 
Disturb ray humble home. 

Yet think not, that by purling- stream 

I'd muse my hours away, 
Or waste, as in some useless dream, 

Life's transitory day. 

Oh ! rather let my active soul 

My active hands employ; 
And teach my lips, where'er I stroll, 

To greet the poor with joy. 

That so my thoughts may still ascend, 

And all-adoring rise, 
To Him who lives, my God and Friend- 

My Saviour in the skies ! 



TO THE SUN. 



Thou lovely orb, whose golden beam, 
In floods of glory, shines supreme, — 
Once could I view, with raptur'd glance, 
The circling seasons round thee dance, 
Could own the joy that nature felt, 
And feel my soul in rapture melt. 



208 

But now, sad change ! I fly thy light, 
And plunge amid the shades of night ; 
Or, if thy soul-enliv'ning ray 
Upon my weary eyelids play, 
'Tis only to increase the pain, 
The burning fever in my brain. 

But soon this scene of sorrow o'er, 
My bursting heart shall feel no more ; 
Soon shall thy lovely beam be shed 
Upon my dark, cold, narrow bed, 
And all that lives beneath thy light 
Be shut for ever from my sight. 



MARY. 



"Ah! why thus reclin'd on the beach, in mute sorrow, 
Dost thou strain thy dim eyes o'er the wide roaring 
sea; 

Perhaps the wish'd bark may arrive here to-morrow, 
And the winds now be wafting thy lover to thee." 

" Oh, no!" she exclaim'd, while the tear-drops were 
streaming, 

And the deeply-drawn sob swell'd her labouring breast, 
" No longer of love, or of happiness dreaming, 

I look to the grave as the place of my rest. 



209 

Consumption's rank breath, like a mildew, destroying 
The fair, but frail blossoms of youth and of health, 

No longer bright hope's lovely visions enjoying, 
I sink the pale victim of pride and of wealth. 

Ah ! parents too cruel! 'tis vain you're relenting; 

I die ere the dear banish'd youth can return ; 
And how will your hard hearts be deeply repenting, 

When you see him in agony kneel by my urn ! 

They sent my belov'd o'er the wide rolling ocean, 
And left me in anguish his loss to deplore ; 

Now melted too late by my soul's wild emotion, 
They woo him again to his own native shore. 

Yet blow, blow, ye breezes, and waft my love hither ; 

Yet, yet let us meet, though in anguish and pain;—- 
Ah! me, life recedes; like the flow'ret I wither, 

That crush'd in the storm can ne'er blossom again." 

Thus ceasing, she cast a last look on the billow, 
As murmuring slow on the sea-beach it roll'd; 

Then sank her fair head on the cliff's rocky pillow, 
And the rent heart of Mary was silent and cold. 



210 



STARLIGHT. 



Ye lovely orbs, that in your courses roll, 

Spangling the firmament with living light, 
In countless millions spread from pole to pole, 

And streaming through the shadows of the night,— 
How can my ravish'd soul, in love and wonder lost, 
Enough adore the hand that form'd your glitfring host! 

Oft, through the silence of the starlight hour, 
When other eyes are clos'd in gentle sleep, 
When I, a stranger to her healing pow'r, 
O'er the dim lamp my midnight vigils keep; 
Sick of the gloomy scene, and the pale quivering light, 
That saddens all my soul, and tires my aching sight — 

Softly I steal me to the open air, 

To breathe awhile the balmy breath of heav'n, 
Look round that world, supported by his care, 
And all the various blessings widely giv'n : 
'Rapt with the glorious view, my soul essays 
Hosannas to his name, his mighty name to raise I 



211 



T'Q #* ###** 



+*^r-+*+- 



Oh ! if thy heart is doom'd to know 

Aught of calamity or woe, 

If on misfortune's stormy sea 

A dang'rous path is mark'd for thee, 

May guardian angels round thee tend, 

And God and virtue be thy friend : 

Superior to the ills of life, 

Above its pleasures, or its strife, 

May'st thou with equal eye behold, 

Or glitt'ring heaps of tempting gold — 

Or the low solitary cell, 

Where modest worth is doom'd to dwell ; 

And thy own breast a temple prove, 

Sacred to honour, peace, and love. 

Oh ! may my prayers ascend to heav'n ! 

And prosp'rous days to thee be giv'n — 

May every sorrow melt away, 

As dew beneath the solar ray, 

And Hope with seraph smiles appear, 

To welcome in another year: 

May Heav'n with coming hours restore 

Wealth, comfort, joy, a plenteous store, 

Illume thy darkened path again, 

And ever shield thy heart from pain* 



212 



SONNET. 1814. 



Sweeter than cooling springs in Arab's waste, 

To the poor traveller, fainting as he goes, 
And sweeter far than nectar to the taste, 

Or to the smell the fragrance of the rose ; 
Lovelier than aught that in the garden grows, 

Fairer than lilies bath'd in morning dew ; 
Softer than zephyr when he softest blows, 

Sporting with halcyon on the billows blue, — 
So soft, so sweet, so lovely didst thou seem, 

Enchantress Hope ! to charm my youthful view- 
Yet were thy whispers but a passing dream, 

A fairy scene that Fancy's pencil drew, 
Like beauteous frost-work 'neath the solar beam, 

And fleeting as the drops of morning dew I 



H*MJN. \ 



E'en in Lapland's land of snow, 
Lilies spring, and roses blow ; 
E'en on Arab's desert sand 
Show'rs refresh the thirsty land ; 



213 

God is present ev'ry where, 
Making ev'ry place his care, 
Looking from his throne above, 
With a parent's tender love. 
Child of sorrow ! cease to weep, 
For his mercy cannot sleep; 
Goodness, love, and care divine, 
Through the whole creation shine. 
He who marks a sparrow's fall, 
Looks with lenderness on all; 
Child of woe! then cease to weep, 
For his mercy cannot sleep. 



RELIGION. 



Holy source of purest pleasure, 
Bliss that never knows alloy! 

Be thy precepts all our treasure, 
And thy practice all our joy! 

Lead us through this vale of sorrow, 
Safely to the darksome tomb; 

There an everlasting uiorrow 
Dawning shall dispel the gloom! 



214 



ELVIRA 



What dying fall from more than mortal string 

Steals on mine ear so soft and slow 1 
From upper realms of air it seems to fling 

Its mournful sweetness on the world below. — 
Such strains do seraphs chaunt, when the still hour 

Of solemn midnight breathes its gloom around, 
What time from harps of heaven they love to pour 

Their hymns of joy; and such the blissful sound 
That welcomes home from scenes of earthly pain 
Some pure and happy spirit — such the strain 
That whispers peace before the blessed die, 
And on the closing ear makes distant melody ! 
'Tis thine, Elvira ! angels bear thee hence ; 

Peril and pain shall visit thee no more, 
No more shall anguish wring thy tortur'd sense, 

Nor doom thy soul to sorrow's with'ring pow'r. 
Yet I must weep — but not that thou art free, 

For bliss is thine beyond conception great ; 
I weep — but, oh ! I weep to follow thee, 

And rather envy than deplore thy fate. 



215 
THE WILLOW- GROVE; 

A BALLAD. 



" The dew hangs on my yellow hair, 
While wearily I pace the grove ; — 

Cold, cold, and chilly is the air; 
Ah! me, what can detain my love! 

Oh! linger in the dark-blue sky, 
Thou lovely orb, to lovers true ; 

For loud the torrent rushes by, 
And slipp'ry is the path with dew. 

Yet oft we steal us to this grove, 
Remote from folly's noisy throng, 

Sacred to virtue and to love ! 

And breathe our vows these wilds among. 

Oh ! what can make my lover stay 1 

He is not wont to linger long: 
Sweet angels ! guide him on his way — 

His dang'rous way, yon cliffs along I" 

As this fair Isabella said, 

The wind sigh'd hollow through the wood ; 
And mournfully its deep green shade 

Waved o'er the darkly rushing flood. 



216 

Tumbling the yawning chasm through, 
The torrent burst its headlong way, 

And down the steep path damp with dew 
Her Edward's dang'rous footing lay. 

The low'ring clouds, with angry sweep, 
Obscur'd by fits the lunar beam, 

And echoing down the sullen steep, 
The bird of night was heard to scream. 

The storm was up — the lightnings glare — 
The thunder groans with hollow sound, 

The dark grove heav'd its branches bare, 
The trembling mountains rock'd the ground, 

And ever and anon was borne 

The wail of anguish on the air; 
And the groves deepest echoes torn 

With the wild laughter of despair, 

'Twas Isabella, luckless maid ! 

Who wildly urg'd her desp'rate way, 
Till the emerging moon display'd 

Where Edward's mangled body lay. 

The storm was o'er, the wind was still, 
The moon shed wide her wat'ry beam, 

O'er drenched valley, vap'rous hill, 
O'er drooping grove, and rushing stream. 



217 

There Edward lay, his bosom gored, 
And mangled all his beauteous face; 

And there the maiden he adored, 
Enfolds him in her cold embrace. 

Her hands were cold, her lips were pale, 
Her heart had ceas'd its frenzied throb; 

And o'er her fair form, in the gale, 

Stream'd her dark hair and blood-stain'd robe. 

In yonder urn, the torrent near, 

Where darkly waves the willow-grove, 

They sepulchred the hapless pair — 
Yon marble stone records their love. 

And still the willow's drooping head, 
O'er the lone spot, is seen to wave ; 

And still the peasant's tears are shed 
At the true lovers' mournful grave. 



ALONZO. 



The setting sun with burning gold 
Had clad the western sky, 

And fair Erema softly rolPd 
Her limpid waters by. 



218 

With balmy breath the wanton breeze 

Sigh'd o'er the vernal vale, 
Disportive shook the trembling trees, 

And kiss'd their blossoms pale. 

A captive knight of high degree, 

In fam'd Segovia's tow'r, 
Cried " Happy breeze ! would I, like thee, 

Could sport from flow'r to flow'r ! 

No more a wretched captive here 

Inglorious would I stay, 
But rush, with glitf ring lance and spear, 

To join the battle-fray. 

The vaunting Spaniard yet should feel 

Alonzo's wonted might, 
And crouch again beneath my steel, 

In valour's struggling fight. 

For thee, Algarve, yet my sword 
Should wake its vengeful gleam, 

And proudly for thy injur'd lord 
My latest life-blood stream. 

But here, in clanking fetters bound, 

Proclaim' d a rebel too! 
By heav'n! methinks each angry wound 

Bleeds at the thought anew!" 



219 

As thus in dark disdainful mood 

He watch'd the close of day, 
And saw on river, tow'r, and wood, 

The sun's departing ray, — 

Night's shadows slowly gather 7 d round ; 

While pensive, cold, and pale, 
The moonbeam kiss'd the dewy ground, 

And sadly sigh'd the gale. 

Sudden was heard through court and yard, 

The noise of tramping steed, 
And loud the massy bolts unbarr'd— 

" Oh ! fly with instant speed •!" 

Quick they unclasp'd the galling chains, 

The captive knight is free : 
They quit the castle, scour the plains, 

And reach the roaring sea. 

There, anchor'd in a lonely bay, 

A bark rolPd on the sea — 
" Speak, speak, my friend, oh! speak, I pray, 

And tell who sets me free." 

" Forbear the thought — I may not breathe 

That all-mysterious name ! 
But fly thee hence — the hero's wreath 

Be thine, and deathless fame !" 



220 

" Now, by mine honour, till I know 

By whom this aid is giv'n, 
From hence I must not, will not go, 

So hear, and help me, Heav'n I" 

" Then list ! a lady sets thee free ; 

But spare that lady's name, 
Nor give to her who rescues thee 

A load of guilt and shame. 

It matters not to tell thee now 
Her equal pow'r and will — 

Enough that Heav'n has heard my vow 
To wait and tend thee still. 

The pleasing task at length is mine, 

Nor spurn my help I pray ; 
But quit these bloody foes of thine — 

Already dawns the day I" 

The boat was near — the rower strain'd 

With sinewy arms the oar ; 
But ere the sandy beach he gain'd, 

Fierce horsemen lin'd the shore. 

" Return, proud rebel-slave, return, 

Return thou traitress too V* 
Alonzo felt his hot blood burn, 

And quick his bright sword drew* 



221 

But round his neck in anguish clung 
The page — the heaving breast, 

The voice, the locks dishevell'd hung, 
Her softer sex confess'd. 

" They shall not touch thy gallant heart, 

Or only reach through mine ; 
In life, in death, we will not part, 

For I am only thine. 

Farewell, farewell, the ruffian steel 
Has pierc'd my bosom through, 

But, ah ! the only death I feel 
Is parting, love ! from you. 

Deride me not, nor brand with scorn, 

When I am laid in earth, 
Nor think me one inglorious born, 

For royal was my birth. 

The daughter I of scepter'd king, 
The Spanish monarch's child, 

But fled the court on eager wing, 
By love for thee beguil'd." 

" Stay, wond'rous saint ! a moment stay ; 

My soul is bursting free, 
And oh ! if death such love repay, 

'Tis bliss to die with thee !" 



222 

Commingling in a purple stream 
Together flow'd their blood, 

While dewy morning's first wan beam 
Glanc'd on the heaving flood. 



STANZAS, 

r— — 



LL hail! thou solitary star! 
To me how dear thy dewy ray, 
Which kindly streaming from, afar, 
Illumes a pensive wanderer's way. 



By this sequester'd nameless stream, 
Which strays the lonely valley through, 

And trembles to thy fairy beam, 
Thee and the tranquil hour I woo. 

For while beneath thy lovely light, 
The misty mountains round me rise, 

The world receding leaves my sight, 
And daring fancy mounts the skies. 

Forgetful of my sorrows here, 

Entranced, I muse on joys to come, — 
And far above thy lucid sphere 

My trembling spirit seeks her home. 



223 

Then sweetly shine, thou ev'ning star ! 

And long, with dewy radiance pale, 
Beam on these tow'ring hills afar, 

And light this solitary vale. 



STANZAS. 



Blithe as the birds that wing the air, 
Ere while my mountain lyre I strung; 
And deem'd the rudest scenes an Eden fair, 
Through which its wild notes rung ; — 
The sterile vale, the green inconstant sea, 
And barren heath-clad hills were all to me. 

But now no more they give delight, 

As in departed days, I ween; 
For gloomy sorrow's long and starless night 
Envelopes ev'ry scene : 
The zephyr's wing, that gently flutters by, 
Scatters in air the frequent sigh. 

Then, faithless flatt'rer, Hope, adieu! 

Thy song no more can soothe my heart; 
Thy fairy pencil, dipp'd in rainbow hue, 
No longer can impart 
To this deluded breast one moment's joy ; 
There pangs of cureless woe thy loveliest scenes destroy. 



224 

Ah! wherefore should this feeble hand 

Essay again to strike the lyre; 
No cherish' d friendship shall the lay demand, 
Responsive to the wire ; 
No seraph-voice of love, or friendship dear, 
Shall steal, like strains from heav'n, upon mine ear. 



STANZAS. 



O'er the rough path, through this dark vale of tears, 
Trembling, and faint, my weary way I wend ; 

While disappointed hopes, and cares, and fears, 
A mournful train, upon my steps attend. 

No guardian hand to lead my wand'ring feet 
From fatal error's wide and wild'ring way j 

No gentle voice, in accents soft and sweet, 

To warn my heart of passion's dangerous sway. 

No sympathizing breast, to which my soul 

May cling for comfort, when distress is nigh ; — 

But, ah ! forbear ! — each fruitless wish controul — 
Patience and faith suppress each rising sigh. 

Fountain of life, oh! everlasting God! 

Forgive the murmurs I have dar'd to make ; 
I feel thy justice, kiss thy chastening rod, 

Nor hope for mercy, but for Jesus' sake. 



225 

Teach me to bow submissive to thy will, 
Let gentle patience pour her healing balm 

O'er my rack'd heart, bid ev'ry throb be still, 
And breathe around a pure and holy calm. 

Teach this sad heart to know thy mercy sure, 
That strong and pow'rful is thine arm to save ; 

So shall my soul these utmost pangs endure, 
And look beyond the confines of the grave. 

Then looking heav'nward, with the eye of faith, 
Where dearer hopes in bright succession rise, 

Submissive wait, till the strong arm of Death, 
By thy command, translate me to the skies. 



MOONLIGHT SKETCH. 



The winds of heav'n are hush'd — and mild- 
E'en as the breath of slumbering child ! 
The western breezes' balmy aigh 
Breaks not the mist-wreaths as they lie, 
Veiling the tall cliff's rugged brow, 
Nor dimples the green waves below. 
Such stillness round — such silence deep — 
That nature seems herself to sleep ! 
The full moon, mounted in the sky, 
Looks from her cloudless place on high; 
And trembling stars, like fairy gleams, 
Twinkle their many-colour'd beams, 



226 

Spangling the world of waters o'er 
With mimic gems from shore to shore, 
Till ocean, burning on the view, 
Glows like another heav'n of blue, 
And its broad bosom, as a mirror bright, 
Reflects their lucid path, and all the fields of light. 



TO AN OLD MUSICAL INSTRUMENT. 



While some, of their fictitious lyres, 

A mournful farewell take, 
Deep tones of sorrow from thy wires, 

My trembling fingers wake : 
What though thy tones were wild and rude, 

Yet oft they pleas'd mine ear, 
They charm'd my hours of solitude, 

And sweeten'd ev'ry tear ! 
Partner of many a lonely hour, 

And soother of its pain. 
Farewell ! thy soft consoling pow'r 

Shall never charm again ! 
Then fare-thee-well ! — for we must part, — 
A lighter hand, a gayer heart 

May wake thy notes with better skill; — 
With more of music's melting art, 

A sadder never will ! 



FINJS> 



INDEX. 





Page 


The Spirits of the Hill ... 


1 


Retribution ; or, the Hall of 




St. Garvin , 


14 


Agnes and the Water-Sprite 


21 


The Storm 


26 


The Zetland Fisherman ... 


31 


Ian the to her Harp 


33 


Orphan Joan ., 


40 


Eloiza , 


43 


William and Susan 


46 


The Distracted Mother ... 


50 


The Soldier's Widow at the 




Grave of her only Child 


53 


The Maniac ... 


55 


The Rural Walk 


56 


Harriet 


57 


Ethelinda 


59 


The Fairy of the Wood ... 


64 


TheMaidofThule 


68 


Poor Ida 


71 


The Spectre of the Lake . 


73 


TheWedding-day of Albert; 




a Northern Tale . ... 


79 


The Fair Captive 


86 


Gavin the False „ 


91 


The Valley of Tow 


94 


The Death of Leander . . 


97 


Address to Zetland 


101 


Address to Pleasure .. .. 


109 


Lubin to Sylvia 


111 



Page 
Address to the Winds ...112 

To Mary 114 

To the Evening Star . ... 116 

To Jessy of Yell 117 

To Charlotte 119 

To Miss Clementina Hous- 
ton, on her leaving 

School 120 

To a Wealthy Man 121 

To Miss B. Ogilvy, Zetland 123 

To Eliza Matilda 126 

To Miss Sophia Headle ... 127 
To Eliza L. G. Sutherland 129 
To Lady Hamley, Bodmin, 

Cornwall 133 

To Mrs. Grant, of Duthell, 
On reading her "Intel- 
lectual Education" ... 135 
Address to the British Navy 137 

To 141 

Inchdorrock 142 

Address to Fancy 146 

To an Hypocrite 151 

To Mrs. D*****j Lerwick 152 
To the Misses ******* ...154 
To the Northern Islander . 155 
On hearing some of Walter 
Scott's Poems recited 
by Mr. E*****, Advo- 
cate, Edinburgh . ... 156 



INDEX. 



Page 



Page 



On the Death of Henrietta 


The Ungenerous, Lerwick 


194 


Duncan, an Infant 


Address to Summer 


ib. 


Cousin 157 


Friendship and Love . ... 


196 


Rosa's Urn 159 


The Farewell 


197 


The Widow to her youthful 


The Revival ... 


198 


Friend ... 160 


The Relapse 


199 


On the Death of the amiable 


Sympathy ,.. ... 


200 


and lovely Miss Geor- 


Stanzas 


ib. 


ginaN. A. T.Grant... 162 


Mary's Tomb 


201 


On the Return of Spring... 164 


Orlando .. ... 


202 


The Adieu ... 166 


On hearing of the Death of 




Lines written on a Stormy 


Miss Georgina Char- 




Night ... .. 168 


lotte Gordon Booker, 




On the Death of Miss Ur- 


Niece to his Grace the 




sula Edmondstone, of 


D uke of Gordon . ... 


204 


Zetland 173 


On the Death of Miss Ann 




On the Death of M***** 


Grant, of Birdsyards 205 


N*******, the Son of 


Independence 


206 


Captain N******* ,.175 


To the Sun .. 


207 


On seeing a Lady at the 


Mary 


208 


Grave of her 'Infant 


Starlight 


210 


Son 177 


To ** ***** 


211 


The Grave of a Man of 


Sonnet 


212 


Worth 178 


Hymn 


ib. 


The Grave of Abbot . ... 179 


Religion 


213 


Faded Pleasures 181 


Elvira 


214 


Thoughts on a Beautiful 


The Willow-Grove 


215 


Night . ... 182 


Alonzo 


217 


On hearing Mournful Music 184 


Stanzas . ... , 


222 


Edwin's Wish 185 




223 





Midnight Scene 187 

Stanzas . ... 189 




224 
225 


Moonlight Sketch 


The Dawn of Day 190 


To an Old Musical Instru- 




The Unknown ... 193 


ment . . Si* 


226 



Dean and Munday, Printers, 35, Threadneedle. street, London. 



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